Synchronization of larval emergence in winter moth (Operophtera brumata L.) and budburst in pedunculate oak (Quercus robur L.) under simulated climate change

1996 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 335-343 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALAN BUSE ◽  
JOHN GOOD
2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (10) ◽  
pp. 160361 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne l-M-Arnold ◽  
Maren Grüning ◽  
Judy Simon ◽  
Annett-Barbara Reinhardt ◽  
Norbert Lamersdorf ◽  
...  

Climate change may foster pest epidemics in forests, and thereby the fluxes of elements that are indicators of ecosystem functioning. We examined compounds of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) in insect faeces, leaf litter, throughfall and analysed the soils of deciduous oak forests ( Quercus petraea  L.) that were heavily infested by the leaf herbivores winter moth ( Operophtera brumata  L.) and mottled umber ( Erannis defoliaria  L.). In infested forests, total net canopy-to-soil fluxes of C and N deriving from insect faeces, leaf litter and throughfall were 30- and 18-fold higher compared with uninfested oak forests, with 4333 kg C ha −1 and 319 kg N ha −1 , respectively, during a pest outbreak over 3 years. In infested forests, C and N levels in soil solutions were enhanced and C/N ratios in humus layers were reduced indicating an extended canopy-to-soil element pathway compared with the non-infested forests. In a microcosm incubation experiment, soil treatments with insect faeces showed 16-fold higher fluxes of carbon dioxide and 10-fold higher fluxes of dissolved organic carbon compared with soil treatments without added insect faeces (control). Thus, the deposition of high rates of nitrogen and rapidly decomposable carbon compounds in the course of forest pest epidemics appears to stimulate soil microbial activity (i.e. heterotrophic respiration), and therefore, may represent an important mechanism by which climate change can initiate a carbon cycle feedback.


2008 ◽  
Vol 92 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 275-298 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barry H. Lynn ◽  
Richard Healy ◽  
Leonard M. Druyan

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meng Na ◽  
Mingyue Yuan ◽  
Lettice Hicks ◽  
Johannes Rousk

<p>Soil organic matter (SOM) stabilization plays an important role in the long-term storage of carbon (C). However, many ecosystems are undergoing climate change, which will change the soil C balance via altered plant communities and productivity that change C inputs, and altered C losses via changes in SOM decomposition. The ongoing change of aboveground plant communities in the Subarctic (“greening”) will increase rhizosphere inputs containing low molecular weight organic substances (LMWOS), which will likely affect C-starved microbial decomposers and their subsequent contribution to SOM mineralization (priming effect).In the present study, we simulated the effects of climate change with N fertilization (simulating warming enhanced nutrient cycling) and litter additions (simulating arctic greening) in Abisko, Sweden. The 6 sampled field-treatments included a full factorial combination of 3-years of chronic N addition and litter additions, as well as, a single year of extreme climate change (3x N fertilizer or litter additions in one growth season). We found that N treatments changed plant community composition and productivityand that the associated shift in belowground LMWOS induced shifts in the soil microbial community. In the chronic N fertilization treatments, plant productivity, and therefore belowground LMWOS input, increased. This coincided with a tendency for more bacterial dominated decomposition (lower fungi/bacterial growth ratio). However, N treatments had no effect on soil C mineralization, but increased gross N mineralization.</p><p>These responses in belowground communities and processes driven by rhizosphere input prompted the next question: how does simulated climate change affect the susceptibility of SOM to priming by LMWOS? To assess this question and determine the microbial mechanisms underpinning priming of SOM mineralization, we added a factorial set of additions including <sup>13</sup>C-glucose with and without mineral N, and <sup>13</sup>C-alanine semi-continuously (every 48 hours) to simulate the effect of rhizosphere LMWOS on SOM mineralization and microbial activity. We incubated these samples for 2 weeks and assessed the priming of soil C and gross N mineralization, bacterial and fungal growth rates, PLFAs, enzyme activities, and microbial C use efficiency (CUE). We found that alanine addition primed soil C mineralization by 34%, which was higher than soil C priming induced by glucose and glucose with N. Furthermore, glucose primed fungal growth, whereas the alanine primed bacterial growth, but microbial PLFAs did not respond to either treatment. The C enzyme acquisition activity was higher than N enzyme acquisition activity in all the treatments, while P enzyme acquisition activity was higher than C for all the treatments. Surprisingly, this suggested a chronic microbial limitation by P, which was unaffected by field and lab treatments. LMWOS additions generally reduced microbial CUE. Responses of microbial mineralization of N from SOM to LMWOS suggested a directed microbial effort towards targeting resources that limited bacterial or fungal growth, suggesting that microbial SOM-use shifted to N-rich components (selective microbial “N-mining”), in contrast with enzyme results. Surprisingly, alanine primed the highest N mineralization compared other additions indicating that there was strong N-mining even if N was sufficient.</p>


Author(s):  
Jorge Jácome ◽  
S. Robbert Gradstein ◽  
Michael Kessler ◽  
Zoltan Tuba ◽  
Nancy G. Slack ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Concostrina‐Zubiri ◽  
Enrique Valencia ◽  
Victoria Ochoa ◽  
Beatriz Gozalo ◽  
Betty J. Mendoza ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 1095-1101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bodil Hernroth ◽  
Helen Nilsson Sköld ◽  
Kerstin Wiklander ◽  
Fredrik Jutfelt ◽  
Susanne Baden

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