Abstract
Microbial decomposition of soil organic matter is a key component of the
global carbon cycle. As Earth’s climate changes, the response of
microbes and microbial enzymes to rising temperatures will largely
determine the soil carbon feedback to atmospheric CO2. While increasing
attention focuses on physiological and ecological mechanisms of
microbial responses, the role of evolutionary adaptation remains little
studied. To address this gap, we developed an ecosystem-evolutionary
model of a soil microbe-enzyme system under warming. Constraining the
model with observations from five contrasting sites reveals evolutionary
aggravation of soil carbon loss to be the most likely outcome; however,
temperature-dependent increases in mortality could cause an evolutionary
buffering effect instead. We generally predict a strong latitudinal
pattern, from small evolutionary effects at low latitude to large
evolutionary effects at high latitudes. Accounting for microbial
evolutionary adaptation will likely be critical for improving
projections of Earth system responses to climate change.