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**Abstract** Biodiversity loss and climate change are two of the most alarming threats to ecosystem functioning and stability. These factors are, however, typically investigated separately, overlooking potential interactions between species extinctions and climate change on ecosystems. Here, we evaluated how different temperature regimes impact the relationship between microbial diversity and ecosystem functioning, in terms of temperature sensitivity of carbon (C) cycling functions. We hypothesized that more diverse communities promote the stability of C cycling functions under both temperature regimes. We did not observe a ubiquitous response of all C-cycling processes to temperature increases within the distinct community diversities. While growth was stable with increasing temperatures among the diversity levels, respiration rates increased more strongly at low diversity levels than high diversity levels at higher temperatures. Carbon use efficiency, which integrates both growth and respiration, tended to decrease with temperature at lower levels of diversity. Jointly, these results demonstrate the importance of community diversity for maintaining C-cycling thermal response under a changing climate.
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