Periodic Reporting for period 2 - COSMYCA (The role of the Earth’s mycelial community and enzyme activity on global atmospheric CO2 and COS budgets)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2024-01-01 do 2025-06-30
To provide insights on forest-fungal interactions and their future response to rising CO2 the COSMYCA project proposes to use carbonyl sulphide (COS), a natural trace gas in the atmosphere that shares a structural resemblance to CO2. Historical patterns in atmospheric COS concentrations are preserved in ice cores and atmospheric sampling stations and satellites are monitoring its more recent behaviour across the planet. Like CO2, COS is removed in large quantities from the atmosphere during the summer because plants also consume COS with the same enzyme, carbonic anhydrase during photosynthesis, providing a unique and independent constraint on the photosynthetic activity of the terrestrial biosphere over time. However, fungi and soil organisms also contain carbonic anhydrases and may also be important sinks for atmospheric COS. Furthermore, N fertilisation reduces the activity of carbonic anhydrases and thus COS uptake, highlighting a more complex, historically dynamic relationship between photosynthesis, belowground communities and COS than previously considered.
The overall objectives of COSMYCA will be to characterise and quantify how changes in atmospheric CO2 and soil nutrient characteristics drive changes in plant-fungal metabolism and how forest ecosystems impact the exchange of COS and CO2 with the atmosphere, now, and over the last century.
Using a similar framework and diverse soils from across Europe, we are also studying how the metabolic features of soils can be linked to the presence of key fungal and bacterial community members and how collectively these community properties relate to measured differences in the exchange of COS and CO2, in addition to enzymatic activities. We have constructed a novel set of machine learning and mechanistic models that can be compared and used to predict how land use and soil property variations impact COS fluxes and soil community carbonic anhydrase activity. Our first results indicate pronounced differences in the metabolic composition of soils across European biomes for the first time and have also shown that some metabolic compounds and soil community members present across all the European soils are strong predictors of COS fluxes and enzyme activities. Our next steps will be to develop a scaling framework to map these features spatially across Europe and beyond.
Another important objective of this project involved developing a framework to trace the interaction of atmospheric COS with the biosphere developing a technique to measure the isotopic discrimination of sulphur isotopes (33S and 34S) in COS during gas exchange with plants and the hyphosphere. This would provide a novel tool to trace and quantify the interactions of COS molecules in the atmosphere with the biosphere, the oceans and human activities. This is a challenge as the concentration of COS in the atmosphere is very low and measuring the isotopic composition of such low concentrations can be difficult to detect with the available instruments. However, with collaborators in the Netherlands we have successfully developed a gas exchange approach to measure isotopic variations during plant gas exchange and we have successfully developed a novel mechanistic framework to describe the fractionation of 34S during COS exchange with leaves.
Future expected results in COSMYCA will come from new experiments that will manipulate different tree species growing with different mycorrhizal partners in different CO2 concentrations to explore how the plant and fungal metabolism, growth and gas exchange respond. Furthermore, we will use results from our different experiments to interpret changes in atmospheric COS at large scales and over time using a novel multi-tracer modelling approach. This will lead to new constrained estimates of changes in CO2 fluxes between the biosphere and atmosphere in the last century and provide novel insights on how different forest tree species will respond to changes in rising CO2 in the future.