Ecological succession, hydrology and carbon acquisition of biological soil crusts measured at the micro-scale.

The hydrological characteristics of biological soil crusts (BSCs) are not well understood. In particular the relationship between runoff and BSC surfaces at relatively large (>1 m(2)) scales is ambiguous. Further, there is a dearth of information on small scale (mm to cm) hydrological characteriz...

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Main Authors: Matthew Tighe, Rebecca E Haling, Richard J Flavel, Iain M Young
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3484118?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-fbf8c684be884850a8e379c26c55f3902020-11-24T21:26:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01710e4856510.1371/journal.pone.0048565Ecological succession, hydrology and carbon acquisition of biological soil crusts measured at the micro-scale.Matthew TigheRebecca E HalingRichard J FlavelIain M YoungThe hydrological characteristics of biological soil crusts (BSCs) are not well understood. In particular the relationship between runoff and BSC surfaces at relatively large (>1 m(2)) scales is ambiguous. Further, there is a dearth of information on small scale (mm to cm) hydrological characterization of crust types which severely limits any interpretation of trends at larger scales. Site differences and broad classifications of BSCs as one soil surface type rather than into functional form exacerbate the problem. This study examines, for the first time, some hydrological characteristics and related surface variables of a range of crust types at one site and at a small scale (sub mm to mm). X-ray tomography and fine scale hydrological measurements were made on intact BSCs, followed by C and C isotopic analyses. A 'hump' shaped relationship was found between the successional stage/sensitivity to physical disturbance classification of BSCs and their hydrophobicity, and a similar but 'inverse hump' relationship exists with hydraulic conductivity. Several bivariate relationships were found between hydrological variables. Hydraulic conductivity and hydrophobicity of BSCs were closely related but this association was confounded by crust type. The surface coverage of crust and the microporosity 0.5 mm below the crust surface were closely associated irrespective of crust type. The δ (13)C signatures of the BSCs were also related to hydraulic conductivity, suggesting that the hydrological characteristics of BSCs alter the chemical processes of their immediate surroundings via the physiological response (C acquisition) of the crust itself. These small scale results illustrate the wide range of hydrological properties associated with BSCs, and suggest associations between the ecological successional stage/functional form of BSCs and their ecohydrological role that needs further examination.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3484118?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew Tighe
Rebecca E Haling
Richard J Flavel
Iain M Young
spellingShingle Matthew Tighe
Rebecca E Haling
Richard J Flavel
Iain M Young
Ecological succession, hydrology and carbon acquisition of biological soil crusts measured at the micro-scale.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Matthew Tighe
Rebecca E Haling
Richard J Flavel
Iain M Young
author_sort Matthew Tighe
title Ecological succession, hydrology and carbon acquisition of biological soil crusts measured at the micro-scale.
title_short Ecological succession, hydrology and carbon acquisition of biological soil crusts measured at the micro-scale.
title_full Ecological succession, hydrology and carbon acquisition of biological soil crusts measured at the micro-scale.
title_fullStr Ecological succession, hydrology and carbon acquisition of biological soil crusts measured at the micro-scale.
title_full_unstemmed Ecological succession, hydrology and carbon acquisition of biological soil crusts measured at the micro-scale.
title_sort ecological succession, hydrology and carbon acquisition of biological soil crusts measured at the micro-scale.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description The hydrological characteristics of biological soil crusts (BSCs) are not well understood. In particular the relationship between runoff and BSC surfaces at relatively large (>1 m(2)) scales is ambiguous. Further, there is a dearth of information on small scale (mm to cm) hydrological characterization of crust types which severely limits any interpretation of trends at larger scales. Site differences and broad classifications of BSCs as one soil surface type rather than into functional form exacerbate the problem. This study examines, for the first time, some hydrological characteristics and related surface variables of a range of crust types at one site and at a small scale (sub mm to mm). X-ray tomography and fine scale hydrological measurements were made on intact BSCs, followed by C and C isotopic analyses. A 'hump' shaped relationship was found between the successional stage/sensitivity to physical disturbance classification of BSCs and their hydrophobicity, and a similar but 'inverse hump' relationship exists with hydraulic conductivity. Several bivariate relationships were found between hydrological variables. Hydraulic conductivity and hydrophobicity of BSCs were closely related but this association was confounded by crust type. The surface coverage of crust and the microporosity 0.5 mm below the crust surface were closely associated irrespective of crust type. The δ (13)C signatures of the BSCs were also related to hydraulic conductivity, suggesting that the hydrological characteristics of BSCs alter the chemical processes of their immediate surroundings via the physiological response (C acquisition) of the crust itself. These small scale results illustrate the wide range of hydrological properties associated with BSCs, and suggest associations between the ecological successional stage/functional form of BSCs and their ecohydrological role that needs further examination.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3484118?pdf=render
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