Main

The temperature sensitivity of decomposition of the enormous global stocks of soil organic matter (SOM)1,2,3,4 has recently received considerable interest, including several high-profile publications supporting opposing views5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14. Interest in this topic is high because of its importance in the global carbon (C) cycle and potential feedbacks to climate change15. This recent controversy has focused primarily on organic matter in upland mineral soils. These soils have reasonably good drainage and aeration, allowing roots and soil fauna to penetrate into mineral soil layers, thus mixing SOM with mineral particles. Conditions in upland mineral soils are also generally favourable for decomposition, resulting in relatively low carbon densities. In contrast, in wetlands and peatlands where anaerobic conditions frequently persist, decomposition proceeds much more slowly, and deep layers of organic matter accumulate on top of mineral layers. In soils with permanently frozen layers (permafrost), drainage is also often poor, and organic matter may become buried in deep soil layers through cryoturbation16. Thus, wetlands, peatlands and permafrost soils generally contain higher carbon densities than upland mineral soils, and together they make up enormous stocks of carbon globally (Table 1). Moreover, permafrost soils and a large fraction of peatland soils occur at high latitudes, where warming is expected to be greatest, and, indeed, has already begun17,18. In this review, we emphasize that decomposition of all types of belowground organic matter should be described by a common set of principles of kinetic theory and environmental constraints. Our objective is to clarify the issues regarding temperature sensitivity of decomposition within a framework that helps to focus the ensuing debate and research.

Table 1 Sizes and vulnerabilities of belowground carbon stocks

Factors controlling decomposition of organic matter

The stocks of organic matter in soils result from the balance between inputs and outputs of carbon within the belowground environment (Fig. 1). Inputs are primarily from leaf and root detritus. Outputs are dominated by the efflux of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the soil surface, although methane (CH4) efflux and hydrologic leaching of dissolved and particulate carbon compounds can also be important. The production of CO2 in soils is almost entirely from root respiration and microbial decomposition of organic matter. Like all chemical and biochemical reactions, these processes are temperature-dependent. Root respiration and microbial decomposition are also subject to water limitation. Hence, most empirical models relate the efflux of CO2 from soils (often lumping microbial and root respiration together as ‘soil respiration’) to temperature and often also to some scalar of soil water content or precipitation19,20,21,22,23,24. This much is not controversial.

Figure 1: Diagram of factors controlling the main inputs and outputs of soil carbon, superimposed over a global map of soil organic carbon stocks.
figure 1

While CO2 is the main product of decomposition in soil, CH4, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), particulate organic carbon (POC) in water, and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) are also significant exports from some soils. The background soil organic carbon (SOC) map (Miller projection; 1:100,000,000) is from ref. 100.

The kinetics of enzymatic reactions in well-mixed media are also not controversial. Activation energies are related to the ambient temperature and to the molecular structure of the organic-C reactant. The temperature sensitivity of decomposition increases with increasing molecular complexity of the substrate (boxed-textBoxes 1 and 2). The reaction rates are also modified by substrate concentrations and affinities of the enzymes for the substrates (Box 3).

In applying this knowledge to soil environments the controversy begins (hereafter we use ‘soil’ loosely to include wetlands, peatlands and permafrost). First, soils contain a ‘veritable soup’ of thousands of different organic-C compounds, each with its own inherent kinetic properties. Not only do plants produce a wide range of carbon substrates, but plant detritus also undergoes transformations by microbial degradation or by abiotic condensation reactions that produce new aromatic structures, larger molecular weights, insolubility, or other molecular architectures that affect the types and efficacies of enzymes that can degrade them25,26. These complex molecular attributes are characterized by low decomposition rates, high activation energies, and inherently high temperature sensitivity (Box 1). We shall call the inherent kinetic properties based on molecular structure and ambient temperature the ‘intrinsic temperature sensitivity’ of decomposition.

Second, the enzymes for decomposition may be physically or chemically excluded from many of the organic-C substrates within the heterogeneous soil environment26, causing substrate limitation at reaction microsites (Box 3). The observed response to temperature under these environmental constraints, which we shall call the ‘apparent temperature sensitivity’, may be much lower than the intrinsic temperature sensitivity of the substrate (Fig. 2). Conversely, if a temperature-sensitive process alleviates an environmental constraint to decomposition, then the subsequent increase in substrate availability could result in the apparent temperature sensitivity temporarily exceeding the intrinsic temperature sensitivity of the substrate.

Figure 2: Factors affecting the ‘apparent’ sensitivity of decomposition of soil organic matter.
figure 2

The intrinsic temperature sensitivity (as in Arrhenius functions, Box 1) of decomposition of an organic-C substrate is a function of the decomposability of the molecule and the ambient temperature. In general, more complex molecular structures have higher activation energies and, hence, higher temperature sensitivity. However, several environmental constraints on decomposition can dampen or obscure the intrinsic temperature sensitivity by reducing substrate availability, often causing the measured (or ‘apparent’) temperature sensitivity to be less than expected. The responses to these multiple factors are shown here as a plane for graphic simplicity, but nonlinear functions (for example, oxygen availability) or step functions (for example, melting of permafrost) may be more realistic for some factors.

The environmental constraints that can temporarily or indefinitely affect apparent temperature sensitivities of decomposition include the following:

(1) Physical protection. Organic matter may become physically protected in the interior of soil aggregates27,28, where microorganisms and their enzymes may have limited access and where oxygen concentrations may also be low. Similarly, organic compounds can be physically protected from degradation by water-soluble enzymes if they have low water solubility or if they occur in hydrophobic domains of humified organic matter29.

(2) Chemical protection. Organic matter may become adsorbed onto mineral surfaces through covalent or electrostatical bonds, thus chemically protecting it from decomposition27.

(3) Drought. Drought reduces the thickness of soil water films, thus inhibiting diffusion of extracellular enzymes and soluble organic-C substrates and lowering substrate availability at reaction microsites. In fire-prone or drought-prone regions, deposition of volatilized hydrophobic molecules can create water-repellency30, which also restricts diffusion of organic matter and enzymes in water films.

(4) Flooding. Flooding slows oxygen diffusion to decomposition reaction sites, often allowing only anaerobic decomposition, which includes fewer and generally slower degradative enzymatic pathways.

(5) Freezing. Although enzymatic reactions can occur below 0 °C (refs 31, 32), the diffusion of substrates and extracellular enzymes within the soil is extremely slow where the extracellular soil water is frozen.

Each of these environmental constraints affects decomposition reaction rates, directly or indirectly, by decreasing substrate concentrations at enzymatic reaction sites. Instead of viewing decomposition rates only through the lens of the temperature-dependent Arrhenius function of the maximum enzymatic reaction rate (Vmax; Box 1), the substrate concentration and the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate (kM, as in Michaelis–Menten kinetics; Box 3) are also crucial for understanding the reaction rate and its sensitivity to temperature. Indeed, conditions of low substrate concentrations at active sites of enzymes may be the rule rather than the exception within the soil matrix.

Common approaches to modelling decomposition

Most efforts to characterize the kinetics of SOM decomposition have stratified carbon compounds into ‘pools’ that share similar mean residence times (MRTs) within the soil. The MRT is the inverse of the decomposition reaction rate (k) and therefore reflects a combination of inherent reactivity of the compound and the environmental constraints on its decomposition. The two best-known biogeochemical models of soil carbon dynamics—the CENTURY33 and ROTH-C34 models—compartmentalize soil carbon into 5–7 conceptual pools, including 2–4 pools of decomposable plant material near the soil surface (litter layer) and three pools of carbon in the mineral soil, with MRTs ranging from years to millennia (Fig. 3). Decomposition of the plant detritus in the litter layers is based on well-supported functions of climate and indices of substrate decomposability, such as carbon-to-nitrogen ratios and lignin content35,36. The three C pools in the mineral soil, from the most labile to the most recalcitrant to decomposition, are called ‘fast’, ‘slow’ and ‘passive’ in CENTURY and ‘microbial biomass’, ‘humified organic matter’ and ‘inert’ in ROTH-C. Many attempts have been made with partial success to measure these various pools through physical and chemical fractionation of the soil13,28, but they remain largely simplified modelling constructs. In lieu of discrete pools, a continuum of soil C substrates of varying chemical complexity and MRTs has also been used to simulate soil C dynamics37.

Figure 3: Diagram of properties of conceptual pools of belowground carbon stocks in two well-known models.
figure 3

The CENTURY33 and ROTH-C34 models each define three discrete soil carbon pools in the mineral soil that lie roughly along a continuum of decomposability and MRT in the soil. The temperature sensitivity of decomposition of the more recalcitrant forms of C is the subject of recent debate. Much of this confusion is due to the fact that the recalcitrant pools are mixtures of simple compounds that have long MRTs owing to physical or chemical protection from decomposition and more complex compounds that have inherently low reactivity and require high activation energy for decomposition.

Although direct measurements of the sizes and MRTs of these conceptual pools of soil C remain imperfect, a consensus has emerged that using multi-pool soil C models to simulate changes in soil C stocks is a major improvement over treating soil C as a single, homogeneous pool38,39,40. A substantial fraction of the SOM resides in the most recalcitrant pool that decomposes very slowly. The importance of this model structure was demonstrated when the multipool ROTH-C model was used in lieu of a single soil C pool model for a global simulation of climate change using the Hadley general circulation climate model. Soil C losses and gains were less severe with the multipool model, both regionally and globally38.

While these models have proven effective for explaining local and regional variation in current soil C stocks and changes in stocks due to management and land-use change, a consensus has not emerged for their applicability to climate change. Typically, most models of soil C dynamics assume that decomposition of all SOM is nearly equally sensitive to temperature12,41,42 but this assumption is contrary to kinetic theory (ref. 43; Box 1). Moreover, decomposition rates may be slow (and MRTs may be long) either because the complex structures of the molecules render them resistant to decomposition, or because environmental constraints restrict access of enzymes to the molecules, or because of a combination of these two factors. Both protected simple compounds and more complex unprotected compounds might be lumped together into a common pool with common MRTs. If the causes of varying MRTs and their potential for change are to be understood, the distinction between intrinsic and apparent temperature sensitivities needs to be addressed explicitly.

Evidence for a decomposition feedback to warming

Discussions of biospheric feedbacks to climatic disruption have been influenced by the perspective that temperature is the dominant limiting factor of respiration, whereas photosynthesis is limited by multiple factors, including light, CO2 concentration, water stress, and nutrient availability44. Woodwell45 and Jenkinson et al.46 argued that respiration of terrestrial ecosystems, including microbial decomposition of SOM, would be more sensitive to global warming than would gross primary productivity. Global warming would thus lead to a net increase of C release to the atmosphere by the terrestrial biosphere (or less net C uptake from the atmosphere by the terrestrial biosphere). However, in the absence of a consensus on the temperature sensitivity of decomposition of a large fraction of soil C stocks, the significance of this positive feedback continues to be debated.

Current geographical relationships between climate and SOM stocks provide important clues, such as the presence of large soil C stocks at high latitudes (Fig. 1). Inferences about the effects of changing climate based on current geographic patterns, however, require the tenuous assumption that a space-for-time substitution adequately describes projections of future scenarios of changing carbon stocks. Nevertheless, in his classical work on soil-forming factors, Jenny47,48 described how soil N concentrations (which covary with soil C) increased with decreasing temperature and increasing precipitation across the Great Plains of central North America. Kirschbaum49 pointed out that Jenny's results imply that decomposition does indeed increase more with temperature than does net primary productivity across this gradient, supporting Woodwell's hypothesis45. Post et al.50 demonstrated similar trends globally, although strong relationships were apparent only for very wet and very dry climates, suggesting that soil water content also plays an important role for constraining rates of decomposition.

Not all gradient studies have supported temperature sensitivity of decomposition11, and there are numerous possible explanations. Not withstanding Jenny's example47,48 it is possible that growing-season length along some north–south gradients could affect gross primary productivity, and thus C inputs to soil, as much or more than temperature affects respiration, thus obscuring the effect of temperature on decomposition when interpreting variation in SOM stocks51. Environmental constraints to decomposition could also covary with temperature along a particular study transect if factors such as mineralogy, clay content, aggregation, or soil water content also covaried along the same gradient. For example, the presence of clay-sized minerals that effectively adsorb organic matter and retain soil moisture can be related to temperature-dependent processes, such as the effects of previous glaciations that expose new bedrock and biogenic production of acids that promote mineral weathering52. Finally, in the example of an observed positive relationship between temperature and soil C stocks along a climate gradient in Finland11, the inferred temperature-insensitivity of decomposition of a large fraction of SOM could be an artefact of model assumptions about fixed or variable mean residence times of conceptualized soil C pools53. We will return to this issue of the consequences of model assumptions on interpreted temperature sensitivities.

When analysing any geographical trend, it is important to remember that instantaneous temperature responses of decomposition of current C stocks reflect the relative abundances of organic-C substrates of differing kinetic properties. Those relative substrate abundances result, in part, from environmental constraints to decomposition during the climate and disturbance history of the soil. For example, the decomposition of organic matter in a highly weathered mature tropical forest soil with high clay content may, on average, have low apparent temperature sensitivity because of chemical protection of a large fraction of soil C on mineral surfaces. In contrast, the apparent temperature sensitivity may, on average, be higher in a recently tilled temperate prairie soil because of lower proportions of substrates under environmental constraints to decomposition. Giardina and Ryan6 ignored this variation in relative abundances of different soil substrates when they calculated MRTs of a single homogeneous soil C pool for a number of soil samples from different latitudes and under different temperature regimes in laboratory experiments. Not surprisingly, they found no correlation between calculated total soil C MRTs and either laboratory incubation temperature or the mean annual ambient temperature of the field locations. They correctly proposed that substrate quality and other stabilization mechanisms are important factors affecting variation of soil C stocks among study sites, but they incorrectly concluded that the temperature sensitivity of decomposition is unimportant. Temperature insensitivity implies zero activation energies of decomposition, which is impossible for biochemical processes. The analysis by Giardina and Ryan6 also did not take into account that the abundance of the various carbon substrates (or ‘pools’), with differing intrinsic temperature sensitivity and under differing constraints to decomposition, are themselves partly the result of climate effects (Box 4).

In addition to observations of natural gradients, several studies of the temperature sensitivity of decomposition have been carried out in the laboratory and in field experiments. Fang et al.9 experimentally applied multiple cycles of varying temperature during a 108-day incubation and estimated the temperature sensitivity for each cycle. The temperature sensitivities of decomposition were not significantly different for the most labile carbon that was respired early in the incubation and for the less labile carbon being respired at the end of the incubation period. They also conducted the experiment on soils from the surface and from deeper soil horizons, the latter presumably having more recalcitrant C associated with mineral surfaces. Again, no statistically significant differences in temperature sensitivities were observed. While the results of Fang et al.9 refuted the notion proposed by others6,11,54,55 that decomposition of the more recalcitrant pools would be less sensitive to temperature than the more labile pools, their results are still contrary to kinetic theory, which indicates higher intrinsic temperature sensitivity for decomposition of the recalcitrant C pools.

In contrast, Knorr et al.10 came to a conclusion consistent with kinetic theory when they fitted data from a laboratory soil incubation experiment56 to a multi-pool soil C model. They calculated not only that decomposition responded positively to temperature for a highly labile pool, but also that decomposition of a less labile pool exhibited higher temperature sensitivity. Most of the SOM resided in a third recalcitrant pool that did not decompose significantly during the incubation period. If not partitioned out in the model, this large pool of recalcitrant organic matter would obscure the temperature sensitivity of the two smaller, more labile pools. Experimental support for kinetic theory was also obtained from incubation experiments of leaf and root litter with varying substrate quality14.

However, each of these studies9,10,11,14 relied upon curve fitting to demonstrate temperature sensitivities to decomposition, and doubts may arise from the underlying assumptions of the models and the power of the statistical tests to detect significantly different curve-fitting parameters. It is possible, for example, that Fang et al.9 did not find significantly higher temperature sensitivity of the more recalcitrant C pools because of a type II error—accepting a null hypothesis of no statistically significant differences among fitted Ea terms. On the other hand, the Knorr et al.10 study has been criticized for creating an artefact of different temperature sensitivities (Ea terms) between pools because of a model assumption of fixed a-terms in the Arrhenius function (ref. 57; boxed-textBoxes 1 and 4). Furthermore, environmental constraints to decomposition of some of the substrates may have been present during these incubations.

Soil warming experiments in the field have also provided equivocal evidence regarding the temperature sensitivity of decomposition. In these experiments, an initial increase in soil CO2 efflux in response to experimental warming has been observed, but this measurable pulse in decomposition often disappears within a few years54,55,58,59. This result, however, must be interpreted with caution because high spatial and temporal variability of measured CO2 efflux rates often preclude powerful statistical tests of small treatment effects, resulting in possible type II errors. Nonetheless, one interpretation of these ephemeral responses has been that only decomposition of the most labile soil C pool was sensitive to the warming treatment, and that decomposition of the older, more recalcitrant soil C was not temperature sensitive. Another interpretation has been that roots and soil microbial communities ‘acclimate’ to the higher-temperature conditions by gradually adapting their metabolism, so that the newly acclimated communities return to respiration rates similar to the pre-treatment levels within a relatively short time (Box 3). However, recent modelling studies10,59,60 have demonstrated that these field experimental data are also consistent with a model of a small, labile pool that is quickly exhausted and a larger less-labile pool that is also temperature sensitive, but that decomposes much more slowly. Model fits of these studies appear better with the multipool models, and neither temperature insensitivity nor acclimation needs to be invoked to explain the observations.

Unfortunately, curve fitting of data from laboratory incubations6,9,10,11,14 and soil warming experiments in the field54,55,58,59,60 is unlikely to resolve the debate about the underlying mechanisms of temperature sensitivities. In a series of discussions of the Knorr et al.10 and Fang et al.9 papers, the same data fit equally well models with different assumptions and, hence, different interpretations of the temperature sensitivity of decomposition of recalcitrant SOM (refs 57, 61, 62; Box 4). Another limitation to curve fitting is that it focuses on the relationship between measured apparent temperature sensitivity and estimated MRTs of experimentally defined soil C pools, rather than attempting to distinguish between intrinsic and apparent temperature sensitivity of the substrates of decomposition.

Despite these controversies, the observational data are converging to demonstrate that more than one ‘pool’ along the labile/recalcitrant continuum (Fig. 3) decomposes with detectable apparent temperature sensitivity. Neither the observational data nor the soil C model simulations, however, have been able to demonstrate a consistent apparent temperature sensitivity of decomposition along the entire spectrum of recalcitrant pools of SOM.

It is tempting to assume that the temperature sensitivity of decomposition of the more recalcitrant forms of SOM is trivial with respect to current concern about feedbacks to global warming, because decomposition of these substrates, even if it is accelerated, contributes so little to instantaneous CO2 fluxes. Nonetheless, because of their large contribution to the soil C stocks, even small changes in the decomposition rates of recalcitrant pools may result in an important change in soil C stocks over decades (Box 2). In fact, we do not know where along the soil-C continuum or among the discrete conceptual pools of SOM (Fig. 3) apparent temperature sensitivity may become irrelevant to contemporary issues of carbon cycling. More importantly, might the existing environmental constraints to decomposition change with changing climate, thus exposing to decomposition SOM with high intrinsic temperature sensitivity? In our opinion, answering this question would be more informative about biospheric feedbacks to warming than refining the correlation between current apparent temperature sensitivity and MRTs of soil C pools.

Temperature dependence of environmental constraints

According to kinetic theory, the constraints to decomposition that are caused by biological and chemical processes must themselves be affected by temperature8 and perhaps other climatic drivers. Let us now reexamine the five environmental constraints to decomposition listed above in light of the question of their own dependence on climate.

(1) Both climate and management affect aggregate formation (through growth of fungal hyphae and activity of soil fauna), which physically protects SOM. The breakdown of aggregates can also be enzymatic26, as the biogenic ‘glue’ that holds the aggregates together is decomposed. In addition, however, purely physical processes, such as ploughing and the impact of raindrops, also destroy aggregates26. These processes are not directly temperature dependent, but are often influenced by climate.

(2) Temperature affects the chemical processes of SOM adsorption and desorption onto mineral surfaces, but little is known about the activation energies of these processes.

(3) The climate-driven hydrologic balance among drainage, precipitation, and evapotranspiration determines soil water film thickness through which the diffusion of soluble organic-C substrates and extracellular enzymes occurs. Likewise leaf litter hydrophobicity associated with drought-prone and fire-prone ecosystems is also affected by climate.

(4) Climate-driven flooding of wetlands and peatlands determines oxygen supply for decomposition. Both precipitation and evapotranspiration are likely to change in many regions of the world owing to climatic disruption63, tipping the hydrologic balance towards summertime drying of many mid-continental peatlands and wetlands and thus exposing large stocks of carbon substrates to aerobic decomposition.

(5) Melting of permafrost will expose organic matter with wide-ranging kinetic properties that are not currently expressed in frozen soil. Once the soil thaws, a major constraint to decomposition will be removed.

Most of the current debate regarding the temperature sensitivity of decomposition of organic matter in mineral soils concerns only physical and chemical protection within the mineral soil matrix. While these processes are extremely important contributors to variability of soil carbon stocks and soil fertility, the extent to which they will participate in positive or negative feedbacks to climate change is not clear. Adsorption and desorption processes are both temperature sensitive and might both increase such that the net effect would be minimal over the next few decades. In contrast, the last two constraints to decomposition—frozen soils and oxygen limitation due to flooding—are likely to be subject to rapid changes under plausible climate change scenarios.

When decomposition in wetlands and peatlands slows owing to lack of oxygen during periods of flooding, the low oxygen concentrations inhibit the activity of phenol oxidase, causing accumulation of phenolic compounds64. These phenolic compounds inhibit the activity of hydrolase enzymes responsible for decomposition, thus slowing decomposition further. This inhibition is quickly reversible once peat becomes aerobic. Hence, the 400–500 Pg (1 Pg = 1015 g) carbon in wetlands and peatlands4,65, which has been accumulating over centuries and millennia, is ‘stable’ only as long as anaerobic conditions are sustained. In the continental areas where summertime soil moisture is expected to decrease63, the upper layers of peat could dry out. An estimated 100 Pg carbon could become aerobic and thus available for decomposition (Table 1; ref. 4). Evidence that this process may already be occurring comes from recently repeated inventories of soils of England and Wales, which show that peat soils and bogs lost carbon at a faster rate than upland soils over the last 25 years (ref. 5).

Carbon losses from peatlands will not necessarily enhance global warming if an increased emission of CO2 is compensated by a decrease in the current net emissions of CH4 (ref. 66). The greenhouse warming potential of CH4 on a per molecule basis is 23 times higher than CO2 on a 100-year timescale67. Likewise, growth of forest vegetation on previously flooded land could sequester significant amounts of C in wood68, although the net carbon balance remains uncertain69. On the other hand, carbon in desiccated peat is also subject to natural and human fires, rapidly releasing huge amounts of carbon to the atmosphere. Siberian and Canadian peatlands are already subject to important peat losses during fire-prone dry years70 and the combination of higher temperatures and peat drying may increase fire frequency and severity71. During the 1997 El Niño, 0.6–0.8 Pg of C (10% of anthropogenic emissions) was lost owing to peat fires in Indonesia alone72. Peat fires could thus have larger effects on the soil carbon feedback than any of the biotic responses presented above73.

Permafrost soils store a similar amount of organic matter as peatlands (Table 1). In these soils with permanently frozen layers, plant litter accumulates both at the surface and on top of the permafrost table through a mixing process called cryoturbation16. When permafrost thaws, large amounts of otherwise mostly unprotected carbon become available for decomposition74,75. A gradual net loss of deep soil C in a boreal forest has also been attributed to warming-induced deepening of the layer of seasonal biological activity76. One estimate suggests that global warming could thaw 25% of the permafrost area by 2100 (ref. 77), thus rendering about 100 Pg carbon vulnerable to decay (Table 1; ref. 4).

Permafrost thaw creates a mosaic of flooded areas interspersed within higher dry areas. In the drier thawed areas, much of the large substrate pool is likely to decompose relatively quickly. Within the flooded thawed areas (thermokarst lakes), however, anaerobic decomposition of organic matter is likely to proceed more slowly, but produces large CH4 emissions78, which could constitute a stronger feedback to the climate system than the larger soil C losses from the drier areas. To further complicate matters, recent evidence indicates that thermokarst lakes are increasing in abundance in the most northern range of permafrost, owing to an initial increase in thermokarst development in response to warming, whereas thermokarst lakes are draining and disappearing in the southern range of permafrost, owing to more advanced degradation of permafrost79.

Frozen and anaerobic conditions merely suspend organic matter in decomposition time, rather than transform it into inherently recalcitrant material. The term ‘stabilization’ has not been rigorously defined with respect to soil carbon dynamics, and it would be misleading to refer to organic C in wetlands and permafrost as ‘stabilized’ in the same sense that organic C is stabilized in mineral soils when it is adsorbed to mineral surfaces or protected in aggregate interiors. In both cases, intrinsic kinetic properties of decomposition of the organic-C substrates are suppressed by environmental constraints (Fig. 2), but the anaerobic and frozen conditions of wetland, peatland, and permafrost soils are more likely to be subject to rapid change. Unlike the debate over mineral soils, the unresolved question regarding peatlands and permafrost is not the degree to which the currently constrained decomposition rates are temperature sensitive, but rather how much permafrost is likely to melt and how much of the peatland area is likely to dry significantly. Such regional changes in temperature, precipitation, and drainage are still difficult to predict in global circulation models. Hence, the climate change predictions, as much as our understanding of carbon dynamics, limit our ability to predict the magnitude of likely vulnerability of peat and permafrost carbon to climate change. Assuming that 25% of the estimated stocks of carbon in peatlands and permafrost is subject to loss due to global warming in the twenty-first century, this potential loss would be two to three times larger than simulated C losses from mineral soils using current soil C models (Table 1; refs 38, 42).

Other global change processes, such as CO2 fertilization, N deposition, improved soil management (for example, conservation tillage), and land-use change could also change soil carbon stocks. We have not addressed these changes, partly because our charge in this review is to focus on the temperature sensitivity controversy, but also because compelling evidence is lacking for globally significant soil C sinks by these processes15,80,81,82,83. In contrast, those belowground carbon pools where environmental constraints to decomposition are themselves highly sensitive to climate may become increasingly important positive feedbacks as global climatic disruption becomes more pronounced.

Conclusions and future research directions

A significant fraction of relatively labile SOM is clearly subject to temperature-sensitive decomposition, but another significant fraction of SOM remains under environmental constraints that often obscure the intrinsic temperature sensitivity of its decomposition. The interpretations of natural climatic gradients and of laboratory and field experiments designed to quantify various carbon fractions and degrees of temperature sensitivity are highly dependent upon model assumptions and curve fitting techniques. Such studies have yielded valuable insight into soil carbon dynamics, but they have not resolved the overall response of global soil C stocks or the magnitude of expected feedbacks to climatic disruption. Moreover, dividing SOM into only temperature-sensitive and apparently temperature-insensitive pools is far too simplistic.

Extrapolation of decomposition rates into a future warmer world based on observations of current apparent temperature sensitivities is inadequate. Rather, we need to understand how substrate availability will change and how a changing set of environmental constraints to decomposition in a future climate will determine the future apparent temperature sensitivity of decomposition. Perhaps a new way forward would be a further reductionist effort to distinguish between inherent kinetic properties of individual substrates and the suite of environmental constraints to decomposition that frequently exist in situ. Our ability to identify and characterize soil substrates is growing with new developments in nuclear magnetic resonance and other technologies, but the task is enormous given the diversity of soil C substrates common in soils. Even when structures are identified within the soil, their concentrations at reactive sites of enzymes are more difficult to estimate. Nevertheless, merging the concepts of substrate availability, such as Michaelis–Menten kinetics, with the temperature sensitivity prescribed by Arrhenius kinetics may provoke new measurement and modelling approaches for soil C dynamics. The multiple processes of environmental constraints that govern availability of substrates to enzymes should be explicitly described and studied within the context of climate change.

Regardless of the experimental and modelling approaches used, the debate about the temperature sensitivity of decomposition should be broadened beyond upland mineral soils specifically to include wetlands, peatlands and permafrost soils. These are the most obvious environments in which current constraints on decomposition are likely to change as a result of climatic disruption, thus potentially exposing large stocks of C to less constrained decomposition during the next few decades. A high research priority should be how the constraints to decomposition in these environments are sensitive to climate.