Primary Research Article
Increased temperature and altered summer precipitation have differential effects on biological soil crusts in a dryland ecosystem
Article first published online: 9 MAY 2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2012.02709.x
© 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Additional Information
How to Cite
Johnson, S. L., Kuske, C. R., Carney, T. D., Housman, D. C., Gallegos-Graves, L. V. and Belnap, J. (2012), Increased temperature and altered summer precipitation have differential effects on biological soil crusts in a dryland ecosystem. Global Change Biology, 18: 2583–2593. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2012.02709.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 10 JUL 2012
- Article first published online: 9 MAY 2012
- Accepted manuscript online: 3 APR 2012 05:31AM EST
- Manuscript Accepted: 10 MAR 2012
- Manuscript Received: 25 JAN 2012
Funded by
- US Department of Energy Program for Ecosystem Research. Grant Numbers: 2005LANLE660, ER64550-1031494-0014103
Keywords:
- 16S rRNA;
- altered precipitation;
- arid lands;
- climate change;
- cyanobacteria;
- drylands;
- quantitative PCR;
- soil;
- temperature
Abstract
Biological soil crusts (biocrusts) are common and ecologically important members of dryland ecosystems worldwide, where they stabilize soil surfaces and contribute newly fixed C and N to soils. To test the impacts of predicted climate change scenarios on biocrusts in a dryland ecosystem, the effects of a 2–3 °C increase in soil temperature and an increased frequency of smaller summer precipitation events were examined in a large, replicated field study conducted in the cold desert of the Colorado Plateau, USA. Surface soil biomass (DNA concentration), photosynthetically active cyanobacterial biomass (chlorophyll a concentration), cyanobacterial abundance (quantitative PCR assay), and bacterial community composition (16S rRNA gene sequencing) were monitored seasonally over 2 years. Soil microbial biomass and bacterial community composition were highly stratified between the 0–2 cm depth biocrusts and 5–10 cm depth soil beneath the biocrusts. The increase in temperature did not have a detectable effect on any of the measured parameters over 2 years. However, after the second summer of altered summer precipitation pattern, significant declines occurred in the surface soil biomass (avg. DNA concentration declined 38%), photosynthetic cyanobacterial biomass (avg. chlorophyll a concentration declined 78%), cyanobacterial abundance (avg. gene copies g−1 soil declined 95%), and proportion of Cyanobacteria in the biocrust bacterial community (avg. representation in sequence libraries declined 85%). Biocrusts are important contributors to soil stability, soil C and N stores, and plant performance, and the loss or reduction of biocrusts under an altered precipitation pattern associated with climate change could contribute significantly to lower soil fertility and increased erosion and dust production in dryland ecosystems at a regional scale.

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