Soil trace gas oxidizers divergently respond to short- and long-term warming
Abstract
The upland soil microbiome is dominated by aerobic bacteria that oxidize atmospheric trace gases, including CO, H 2 , and CH 4 . As a result, soils are the largest biological sink for these climate-active gases. Whether global warming will enhance or suppress these processes remains unclear. Here, we studied the warming responses of soil trace gas oxidizers by profiling natural geothermal gradients in a subarctic grassland with over 60 years of field warming at +6°C. We integrate field flux measurements, ex situ biogeochemical assays, metagenomics, and metatranscriptomics to determine ecosystem and cellular-level responses. Our results show that the oxidation of atmospheric CO and H 2 , but not CH 4 , increased with long-term warming due to higher cell numbers. However, at the cellular level, trace gas oxidizers, especially methanotrophs, tended to reduce gas consumption and transcription of gas-metabolizing enzymes in response to long-term warming. Our findings suggest that soils may remain a robust sink for trace gases despite lower per-cell activity. This work establishes a framework for interpreting the relationships between temperature and microbial trace gas oxidation on timescales relevant to Earth’s climate system.
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