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Details of Award

NERC Reference : NE/X015076/1

Turbo-charging the mycorrhizosphere - Could more productive ecosystems threaten soil carbon stocks in boreal and sub-arctic zones of transition?

Grant Award

Principal Investigator:
Professor PA Wookey, University of Stirling, Biological and Environmental Sciences
Co-Investigator:
Dr AFS Taylor, The James Hutton Institute, Ecological Sciences
Co-Investigator:
Dr TC Parker, The James Hutton Institute, Ecological Sciences
Co-Investigator:
Dr L Street, University of Edinburgh, Sch of Geosciences
Science Area:
Atmospheric
Earth
Freshwater
Terrestrial
Overall Classification:
Panel C
ENRIs:
Biodiversity
Global Change
Natural Resource Management
Science Topics:
Biodiversity
Community structure
Ecosystem function
Ecosystem services
Fungal communities
Genetic diversity
Land use
Microbes
Mycorrhizae
Nutrient limitation
Organic matter
Primary production
Succession
Terrestrial communities
Trophic relations
Community Ecology
DNA sequencing
Microbial communities
Population dynamics
Population structure
Environmental Genomics
Carbon cycling
Isotopic analysis
Microbial communities
Nitrogen cycling
Primary production
Soil biochemistry
Soil organics
Water quality
Biogeochemical Cycles
Atmospheric fluxes
Carbon fluxes
Carbon sequestration
Climate modelling
Element cycles
Greenhouse gases
Land use change
Microbial communities
Nutrient cycling
Soil organic matter
Vegetation management
Vegetation modelling
Land - Atmosphere Interactions
Ectomycorrhizal fungi
Land use
Microbial communities
Nutrient cycling
Organic matter
Peat
Plant-soil interactions
Rhizosphere biology
Soil biodiversity
Soil biology
Soil chemistry & soil physics
Soil ecosystems
Soil formation
Soil microbiology
Soil organics
Soil process modelling
Soil science
Soil types
Water quality
Soil science
Abstract:
The Context of the Research - Many high-profile research papers and syntheses have equated increased vegetation productivity and shifting vegetation types in northern high latitudes with increased net carbon (C) sequestration from the atmosphere. Although logical and intuitive, this largely overlooks the potential fate of pre-existing soil organic carbon (SOC) in these regions. This is a problem because soils at high latitudes are notably C-rich (containing ~570 Pg C in boreal/taiga forest and tundra soils alone; note, 1 Pg (Peta-gram) = 1,000,000,000 tonnes) and this pool is dynamic, intrinsically interacting both with vegetation cover and with climate. Although challenging to investigate, we cannot overlook below-ground processes if we are to understand net C budgets on timescales relevant to the Climate Emergency. Understanding the fundamental mechanisms controlling the accumulation, stability, and loss of soil organic matter (SOM) is as essential for predicting the Earth's future climate as understanding photosynthesis and plant productivity. However, our understanding of, and ability to model, SOM dynamics lags far behind that of primary productivity. Furthermore, rapid warming at high northern latitudes adds urgency to understanding controls on whole-ecosystem C cycling, net fluxes of CO2 between ecosystems and the atmosphere, and the vulnerability of SOM to changes in both climate and management (for example, tree planting for C-sequestration). Aims and Objectives - In MYCONET we focus on the 'mycorrhizosphere' (the soil and organisms directly influenced by roots and their mycorrhizal fungi) of C-rich soils of northern high latitudes and its potential response both to increasing plant productivity and to shifts to woodier shrub and tree communities. We hypothesise that associated changes in the mycorrhizosphere could, paradoxically, result in net losses, rather than gains, of soil C over timescales (i.e. several decades) of relevance to the Climate Emergency. This would represent a 'positive feedback' on climate change (i.e. when the rates of CO2 emission to the atmosphere, due to SOM decomposition, exceed net rates of CO2 uptake via photosynthesis). We will push the frontiers by applying ground-breaking techniques in the use - and innovative experimental deployment - of natural abundance (and depleted) radiocarbon (14C), together with metagenomics, soil and root-tip enzyme assays and SOM chemistry, to quantify and understand the processes and dynamics of the mycorrhizosphere and how these affect SOC stocks. We focus, in detail, on the process of 'priming' (which occurs when material added to soil affects the rate of decomposition of SOM, either positively or negatively), and the specific role of mycorrhizal fungi in this, and related, processes. We will measure these processes both in situ (in the Arctic and the UK uplands) and in controlled experiments (using specific combinations of tree, shrub and mycorrhizal symbionts), as part of an integrated package of mechanistic studies, soil profile analysis and dynamic SOM modelling, to quantify and understand how priming works, and the implications for SOM dynamics, ecosystem C fluxes, and nutrient cycling. Potential applications and benefits - By applying ground-breaking techniques MYCONET will transform our understanding of plant-soil interactions and the role of mycorrhizal fungi in SOM dynamics. The fundamental new knowledge gained will significantly improve regional and global modelling of climate-biogeochemical interactions, with a particular focus on the indirect effects of shifting plant communities. The project has relevance for the pan-Arctic 'shrubification', as well as for ecosystems being managed for C-sequestration or 're-wilding'. This project is especially timely, given the major policy emphasis and public interest in tree planting for C sequestration.
Period of Award:
1 May 2023 - 31 Oct 2026
Value:
£667,426
Authorised funds only
NERC Reference:
NE/X015076/1
Grant Stage:
Awaiting Event/Action
Scheme:
Standard Grant FEC
Grant Status:
Active

This grant award has a total value of £667,426  

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FDAB - Financial Details (Award breakdown by headings)

DI - Other CostsIndirect - Indirect CostsDA - InvestigatorsDI - StaffDA - Estate CostsDA - Other Directly AllocatedDI - T&S
£56,104£255,874£93,317£158,644£62,641£14,395£26,448

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