Authors
Gangsheng Wang, Sindhu Jagadamma, Melanie A Mayes, Christopher W Schadt, J Megan Steinweg, Lianhong Gu, Wilfred M Post
Publication date
2015/1
Journal
The ISME journal
Volume
9
Issue
1
Pages
226-237
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Climate feedbacks from soils can result from environmental change followed by response of plant and microbial communities, and/or associated changes in nutrient cycling. Explicit consideration of microbial life-history traits and functions may be necessary to predict climate feedbacks owing to changes in the physiology and community composition of microbes and their associated effect on carbon cycling. Here we developed the microbial enzyme-mediated decomposition (MEND) model by incorporating microbial dormancy and the ability to track multiple isotopes of carbon. We tested two versions of MEND, that is, MEND with dormancy (MEND) and MEND without dormancy (MEND_wod), against long-term (270 days) carbon decomposition data from laboratory incubations of four soils with isotopically labeled substrates. MEND_wod adequately fitted multiple observations (total C–CO2 and 14C–CO2 …
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