Microbes, or microorganisms too small to be visible to
the naked eye, ruled the earth for billions of years. Larger living structures, macroorganisms,
including humans, would evolve from these smaller objects while embedded in a
microbe soup. We and these microbes are
thus intimately related and inseparable.
All life on earth is dependent upon a microbe support system. We humans are making rapid changes to Earth’s
ecosystems and trying to predict what the effects of that activity might be on
our future. We spend most of our efforts
studying what we can see, while forgetting to learn about changes to this
unseen world of microbes. There is a
group, scientistswarning, devoted to educating the public about the
various threats we face from our human activities. They recently released a report on this
subject: Scientists’ warning to humanity: microorganisms and climate change.
“Human activities and their
effects on the climate and environment cause unprecedented animal and plant
extinctions, cause loss in biodiversity and endanger animal and plant life on
Earth. Losses of species, communities and habitats are comparatively well
researched, documented and publicized. By contrast, microorganisms are
generally not discussed in the context of climate change (particularly the
effect of climate change on microorganisms)…simply put, the microbial world
constitutes the life support system of the biosphere. Although human effects on
microorganisms are less obvious and certainly less characterized, a major
concern is that changes in microbial biodiversity and activities will affect
the resilience of all other organisms and hence their ability to respond to
climate change.”
Before humans arrived on the scene, a carbon cycle
existed that determined the sources and sinks of the various greenhouse
gases. These sources and sinks were two
very large numbers whose difference could vary significantly. The climate would respond to whatever balance
was attained. Great variations in
climate have been observed over geological times as that balance has shifted. Since the industrial revolution, we have been
disturbing this balance by pumping excess carbon dioxide and methane into the
atmosphere. The climate has responded by
getting warmer. This is easily
determined. What is much less understood
is the role microbes are playing—and will play—as more greenhouse gases are
pumped into the air. Microbes, as “the
life support system of the biosphere,” control these sources and sinks and thus
determine how the Earth responds to climate change. We understand these microbial processes so
little that we cannot predict with certainty exactly how the planet, as a
whole, will respond. What we know is
that, thus far, rising temperatures appear to support ever higher temperatures
by favoring greenhouse gas sources over sinks.
Rising levels of carbon dioxide can, independently of temperature, affect
planetary response as well.
“Although microorganisms are
crucial in regulating climate change, they are rarely the focus of climate
change studies and are not considered in policy development. Their immense
diversity and varied responses to environmental change make determining their
role in the ecosystem challenging. In this Consensus Statement, we illustrate
the links between microorganisms, macroscopic organisms and climate change, and
put humanity on notice that the microscopic majority can no longer be the
unseen elephant in the room. Unless we appreciate the importance of microbial
processes, we fundamentally limit our understanding of Earth’s biosphere and
response to climate change and thus jeopardize efforts to create an
environmentally sustainable future.”
Both the oceans and land masses produce complicated
microbial behavior contributing to sources and sinks of greenhouse gases. The ocean, because of its fluid nature and
large fraction of the planet’s surface, produces more immediate responses to human
(anthropomorphic) changes. It has been
estimated that 90% of marine biomass is microbial, and that the oceans provide
about 50% of the planet’s carbon dioxide fixation through photosynthesis. But increased levels of carbon dioxide in the
oceans change the acidity level and thus change many critical processes. Human caused pollution and the effects of
warming are also affecting ocean environments in complex ways that are
discussed in the report.
Here, the focus will be on terrestrial processes which
are more easily observed. Controlled experiments
are even possible. Plants and the soil
that support them provide most of the Earth’s biomass and are the critical
components. Plants absorb carbon dioxide
and release oxygen via photosynthesis.
Soil provides the opposite effect by having microorganisms break down
organic materials and release carbon dioxide and/or methane. Approximately 50% of plant mass will
eventually end up as a component of the soil and provide plenty of material for
consumption. In addition, soil has
provided long-term storage for organic material that has not been available for
consumption in the form of permafrost and peatlands.
“Peat (decomposed plant litter)
covers ~3% of the land surface and, due to plant productivity exceeding
decomposition, intact peatlands function as a global carbon sink and contain
~30% of global soil carbon. In permafrost, the accumulation of carbon in
organic matter (remnants of plants, animals and microorganisms) far exceeds the
respiratory losses, creating the largest terrestrial carbon sink. Climate
warming of 1.5–2 °C (relative to the global mean surface temperature in
1850–1900) is predicted to reduce permafrost by 28–53% (compared with levels in
1960–1990), thereby making large carbon reservoirs available for microbial
respiration and greenhouse gas emissions.”
If we are to be relieved of this seemingly inevitable
feedback mechanism for producing ever more greenhouse gas emissions, it will
depend on the behavior of microorganisms as temperature and greenhouse gas
contributions increase.
“Soils store ~2,000 billion
tonnes of organic carbon, which is more than the combined pool of carbon in the
atmosphere and vegetation…Soil microorganisms regulate the amount of organic
carbon stored in soil and released back to the atmosphere, and indirectly
influence carbon storage in plants and soils through provision of
macronutrients that regulate productivity…”
Thus far, it appears we will get no relief: greenhouse
gas production will elevate temperatures and produce even more greenhouse
gases. Drew Pendergrass provided an
article titled Ground Control for Harper’s Magazine that provided
some additional insight into the issue of soil response to elevated
temperature.
“Natural processes in the soil
contribute more than six times as much carbon dioxide to the atmosphere each
year than does the burning of fossil fuels. Microbes in the dirt release the
gas as they consume dead plants and animals. Before the Industrial Revolution,
those emissions were offset by the uptake of carbon by plants, but as global
ecosystems react to a sudden shot of carbon dioxide, the balance has been
disturbed. Even a slight change in how soils behave would have drastic impacts
on the environment.”
Harvard University was granted a section of forest west
of Boston. Since 1907 they have chosen to
use it as a research area to study the resident ecosystem. Of particular interest is the emission of
carbon dioxide and methane as the temperature of the soil heats up. In order to study this phenomenon, they
created patches of earth with heating coils in them that would keep the soil five
degrees Celsius warmer than control patches so they could compare emissions
between the two types. That experiment
is still ongoing.
The obvious assumption was that higher temperatures would
increase microbial activity and lead to greater carbon dioxide emission. That was what was initially observed.
“Microbes flourish when they are
warmer and have more freedom to move around, so Melillo and his colleagues
expected the microbes in the heated soil to consume more nutrients and emit
more carbon dioxide as a byproduct. They were right. ‘The initial response was,
in some ways, exactly what you would expect,’ said David Foster, a
silver-haired ecologist who has been the director of Harvard Forest since 1990.
‘If we heat up soils, we’re going to release a ton of carbon dioxide. And
that’s going to have this very strong positive feedback’.”
However, things would change after about ten years and it
appeared that there was a limit to the amount the microbes could produce.
“It took ten years for the story
to change. In 2001, scientists noticed that the soil in the warmed plots had
stopped releasing excess carbon dioxide—its greenhouse gas emissions looked
just like those of the control plots. When the scientists looked more closely,
they found that the microbes, which had been eating quickly in the warmer
environment, were now dying off in large numbers because they were out of
balance with the rest of the ecosystem. Eventually the pantry emptied, and the
microbes starved.”
This potentially good news was merely a pause in the
process. The initial microbial
population was suitable for devouring the low hanging fruit, the easily
digested carbon compounds. There
remained much more carbon in less easily attacked forms; the microbes merely
had to evolve the ability to consume those—something they seem to be quite
capable of doing. By 2008 the heated
plots were emitting carbon dioxide at nearly the same rate as when the
experiment with elevated temperatures began.
Kristen DeAngelis, a microbiology professor provided the explanation.
“From her experience as a
microbiologist, DeAngelis knew that microbes often gain new abilities under
stress. She found that the microbes in the warmed plots were better at
digesting cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin—tough, mealy molecules known as
“recalcitrant carbon”—than the same species in the control plots. Soils around
the world are full of recalcitrant carbon, but scientists had not anticipated
that microbes would be able to consume it. The fact that warmed microbes were
willing and able to chow down on these molecules was bad news for the climate.”
Pondering these results, Pendergrass inserted these
thoughts.
“Recent research suggests that
the Amazon rainforest will soon transform from a carbon sink into a carbon
source, because of warming and other human-driven change. Farther north, the
permafrost is melting. The Arctic tundra contains gobs of easy-to-digest carbon
that has been frozen for centuries; once it melts, the microbes there could
start a feeding frenzy. Scientists expect that the carbon emitted by thawing
land up north will be far worse than anything Melillo observed in his warming
experiment.”
Recall that soil emissions of carbon dioxide are already
six times higher than that from burning fossil fuels. What will there be to balance even higher
rates? The fate of the oceans is less
certain. Perhaps they will provide some
assistance as our reckless behavior continues.
Unfortunately, like us, terrestrial microbes are only concerned with
their immediate needs.
We seem unable or unwilling to change our habits. The discussion presented here suggests that
there could be a point of no return when climate change will continue without
our contribution. What do we do then? How will it end?
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