Abstract
Wildfires, which are increasing in frequency and severity with climate change, reduce soil microbial biomass and alter microbial community composition and function. The soil microbiome plays a vital role in carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling, but its complexity makes it challenging to predict post-wildfire soil microbial dynamics and resulting impacts on ecosystem biogeochemistry. The application of biogeochemically relevant conceptual trait-based frameworks to the soil microbiome can distill this complexity, enabling enhanced predictability of soil microbiome recovery following wildfire and subsequent impacts to biogeochemical cycles. Conceptual frameworks that have direct links to soil C and N cycling have been developed for the soil microbiome; the Y-A-S framework overviews soil microbiome life history strategies that have tradeoffs with one another and others have proposed frameworks specific to wildfire. Here, we aimed to delineate post-wildfire changes of bacterial traits in western US coniferous forests to inform how severe wildfire influences soil microbiome recovery and resultant biogeochemical cycling. We utilized a comprehensive metagenome-assembled genome catalog from post-wildfire soils representing 1 to 11 years following low- and high-severity burning to identify traits that enable the persistence of microbial taxa in burned soils and influence ecosystem C and N cycling. We found that high-severity wildfire initially selects for fast growers and, up to a decade post-fire, taxa that invest in genes for acquiring diverse resources from the external environment, which in combination could increase soil C losses. This work begins to disentangle how climate change–induced shifts in wildfire behavior might alter microbially mediated soil biogeochemical cycling.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | ycae108 |
| Journal | ISME Communications |
| Volume | 4 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Jan 1 2024 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Funding
The CSU Agricultural Experiment Station is thanked for support to A.R.N. We thank the US Forest Service for allowing us to collect samples. This work was supported by awards from National Science Foundation (DEB-2114868) and a US Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture award (2021-67019-34608) to M.J.W., C.C.R., T.B., and S.I.G. and a Department of Energy Biological and Environmental Research Genomic Sciences Program (DE-SC0023127) to S.I.G. and M.J.W. Metagenomic sequencing was performed at the Joint Genome Institute by the Community Sequencing Project award 507961 to S.I.G. and M.J.W. This facility is sponsored by the Office of Biological and Environmental Research and operated under contract number DE-AC02-05CH11231. This work was supported by awards from National Science Foundation (DEB-2114868) and a US Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture award (2021-67019-34608) to M.J.W., C.C.R., T.B., and S.I.G. and a Department of Energy Biological and Environmental Research Genomic Sciences Program (DE-SC0023127) to S.I.G. and M.J.W. Metagenomic sequencing was performed at the Joint Genome Institute by the Community Sequencing Project award 507961 to S.I.G. and M.J.W. This facility is sponsored by the Office of Biological and Environmental Research and operated under contract number DE-AC02-05CH11231.
Keywords
- metagenomics
- soil microbiome
- traits
- wildfire