Rapidly expanding nascent ecosystems at glacier forefields under climate warming dramatically enhance the terrestrial carbon (C) sink. Microbial C fixation and degradation, closely implicated in nitrogen (N) transformation and plant–soil–microbe interactions, significantly regulate soil C accumulation. However, how shifts in microbial functional potential impact soil C sequestration during vegetation succession remains unclear. Here, we synchronized microbial C and N cycling genes in the rhizosphere and bulk soils across an ∼130-year chronosequence at the Hailuogou Glacier in the eastern Tibetan Plateau. Carbon fixation dominated microbial C cycling throughout the chronosequence, contributing to 74% of C-cycling gene abundances and increasing 3–6 times at the intermediate stage relative to the initial stage. Microbes favored energy-efficient and carbonate utilization pathways, such as the Wood–Ljungdahl and 3-hydroxypropionate cycles, to support high C-fixation potential. Ammonification, primarily driven by the ureC gene (>50% of N-cycling gene abundances), dictated N supply for plants and microbes. This enhanced soil N availability likely stimulated microbial biomass, diversity, and specific taxa, thereby optimizing C use efficiency. However, the ammonification-driven C fixation was contingent upon specific plant species at different succession stages. Our findings highlight the pivotal role of microbial N mineralization in shaping microbial communities and driving soil C accumulation in deglaciated landscapes.

From Barren Rock to Thriving Life: How Nitrogen Fuels Microbial Carbon Fixation in Deglaciated Landscapes / Y. Wang, H. Bing, G.F. Ficetola, T. Wang, C. Duan, T. Qiu, W. Yang, Y. Wu, Z. Zhang, Y. Wu, J. Liu, W. Tan, L. Fang. - In: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 0013-936X. - 59:39(2025 Oct 07), pp. 21174-21188. [10.1021/acs.est.5c00897]

From Barren Rock to Thriving Life: How Nitrogen Fuels Microbial Carbon Fixation in Deglaciated Landscapes

G.F. Ficetola;
2025

Abstract

Rapidly expanding nascent ecosystems at glacier forefields under climate warming dramatically enhance the terrestrial carbon (C) sink. Microbial C fixation and degradation, closely implicated in nitrogen (N) transformation and plant–soil–microbe interactions, significantly regulate soil C accumulation. However, how shifts in microbial functional potential impact soil C sequestration during vegetation succession remains unclear. Here, we synchronized microbial C and N cycling genes in the rhizosphere and bulk soils across an ∼130-year chronosequence at the Hailuogou Glacier in the eastern Tibetan Plateau. Carbon fixation dominated microbial C cycling throughout the chronosequence, contributing to 74% of C-cycling gene abundances and increasing 3–6 times at the intermediate stage relative to the initial stage. Microbes favored energy-efficient and carbonate utilization pathways, such as the Wood–Ljungdahl and 3-hydroxypropionate cycles, to support high C-fixation potential. Ammonification, primarily driven by the ureC gene (>50% of N-cycling gene abundances), dictated N supply for plants and microbes. This enhanced soil N availability likely stimulated microbial biomass, diversity, and specific taxa, thereby optimizing C use efficiency. However, the ammonification-driven C fixation was contingent upon specific plant species at different succession stages. Our findings highlight the pivotal role of microbial N mineralization in shaping microbial communities and driving soil C accumulation in deglaciated landscapes.
English
climate warming; functional potentials; glacier chronosequence; microbial C fixation; microbial N cycling; soil C dynamics
Settore BIOS-03/A - Zoologia
Settore BIOS-05/A - Ecologia
Settore GEOS-03/A - Geografia fisica e geomorfologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
Goal 13: Climate action
Goal 2: Zero hunger
Goal 15: Life on land
Goal 14: Life below water
   Reconstructing community dynamics and ecosystem functioning after glacial retreat (IceCommunities)
   IceCommunities
   EUROPEAN COMMISSION
   H2020
   772284

   Vanishing habitats: conservation priorities for glacier-related biodiversity threatened by climate change (PrioritIce)
   PrioritIce
   MINISTERO DELL'UNIVERSITA' E DELLA RICERCA
   Biodiversa2021-280
7-ott-2025
9-set-2025
American Chemical Society ACS
59
39
21174
21188
15
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
From Barren Rock to Thriving Life: How Nitrogen Fuels Microbial Carbon Fixation in Deglaciated Landscapes / Y. Wang, H. Bing, G.F. Ficetola, T. Wang, C. Duan, T. Qiu, W. Yang, Y. Wu, Z. Zhang, Y. Wu, J. Liu, W. Tan, L. Fang. - In: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 0013-936X. - 59:39(2025 Oct 07), pp. 21174-21188. [10.1021/acs.est.5c00897]
mixed
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
13
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
Y. Wang, H. Bing, G.F. Ficetola, T. Wang, C. Duan, T. Qiu, W. Yang, Y. Wu, Z. Zhang, Y. Wu, J. Liu, W. Tan, L. Fang
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