The extent to which terrestrial ecosystems slow climate change by sequestering carbon hinges in part on nutrient limitation. We used a coupled carbon-climate model that accounts for the carbon cost to plants of supporting nitrogen-acquiring microbial symbionts to explore how nitrogen limitation affects global climate. To do this, we first calculated the reduction in net primary production due to the carbon cost of nitrogen acquisition. We then used a climate model to estimate the impacts of the resulting increase in atmospheric CO2 on temperature and precipitation regimes. The carbon costs of supporting symbiotic nitrogen uptake reduced net primary production by 8.1 PgC yr(-1), with the largest absolute effects occurring in tropical forest biomes and the largest relative changes occurring in boreal and alpine biomes. Globally, our model predicted relatively small changes in climate due to the carbon cost of nitrogen acquisition with temperature increasing by 0.1 degrees C and precipitation decreasing by 6 mm yr(-1). However, there were strong regional impacts, with the largest impact occurring in boreal and alpine ecosystems, where such costs were estimated to increase temperature by 1.0 degrees C and precipitation by 9 mm yr(-1). As such, our results suggest that carbon expenditures to support nitrogen-acquiring microbial symbionts have critical consequences for Earth's climate, and that carbon-climate models that omit these processes will overpredict the land carbon sink and underpredict climate change. Copyright statement. Mingjie Shi's and Joshua B. Fisher's copyright for this publication is transferred to the California Institute of Technology.
1.CALTECH, Jet Prop Lab, 4800 Oak Grove Dr, Pasadena, CA 91109 USA 2.Univ Calif Los Angeles, Joint Inst Reg Earth Syst Sci & Engn, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA 3.Indiana Univ, Dept Biol, 702 N Walnut Grove Ave, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA 4.West Virginia Univ, Dept Biol, 53 Campus Dr, Morgantown, WV 26506 USA
Recommended Citation:
Shi, Mingjie,Fisher, Joshua B.,Phillips, Richard P.,et al. Neglecting plant-microbe symbioses leads to underestimation of modeled climate impacts[J]. BIOGEOSCIENCES,2019-01-01,16(2):457-465