Stoichiometric plasticity of microbial communities is similar between litter and soil in a tropical rainforest

Résumé

© 2017 The Author(s). Heterotrophic microorganisms are commonly thought to be stoichiometrically homeostatic but their stoichiometric plasticity has rarely been examined, particularly in terrestrial ecosystems. Using a fertilization experiment in a tropical rainforest, we evaluated how variable substrate stoichiometry may influence the stoichiometry of microbial communities in the leaf litter layer and in the underlying soil. C:N:P ratios of the microbial biomass were higher in the organic litter layer than in the underlying mineral soil. Regardless of higher ratios for litter microbial communities, C, N, and P fertilization effects on microbial stoichiometry were strong in both litter and soil, without any fundamental difference in plasticity between these two communities. Overall, N:P ratios were more constrained than C:nutrient ratios for both litter and soil microbial communities, suggesting that stoichiometric plasticity arises because of a decoupling between C and nutrients. Contrary to the simplifying premise of strict homeostasis in microbial decomposers, we conclude that both litter and soil communities can adapt their C:N:P stoichiometry in response to the stoichiometric imbalance of available resources.


Auteurs, date et publication :

Auteurs Nicolas Fanin , Nathalie Fromin , Sandra Barantal , Stephan Hättenschwiler

Publication : Scientific Reports

Date : 2017

Volume : 7

Issue : 1

Pages : 12498


Catégorie(s)

#CIRAD #FORET Paracou