首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Warming alters coupled carbon and nutrient cycles in experimental streams
Authors:Tanner J. Williamson  Wyatt F. Cross  Jonathan P. Benstead  Gísli M. Gíslason  James M. Hood  Alexander D. Huryn  Philip W. Johnson  Jill R. Welter
Affiliation:1. Department of Ecology, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, USA;2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA;3. Institute of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Iceland, Askja, Sturlugata, Iceland;4. Department of Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA;5. Department of Biology, St. Catherine University, Saint Paul, MN, USA
Abstract:Although much effort has been devoted to quantifying how warming alters carbon cycling across diverse ecosystems, less is known about how these changes are linked to the cycling of bioavailable nitrogen and phosphorus. In freshwater ecosystems, benthic biofilms (i.e. thin films of algae, bacteria, fungi, and detrital matter) act as biogeochemical hotspots by controlling important fluxes of energy and material. Understanding how biofilms respond to warming is thus critical for predicting responses of coupled elemental cycles in freshwater systems. We developed biofilm communities in experimental streamside channels along a gradient of mean water temperatures (7.5–23.6 °C), while closely maintaining natural diel and seasonal temperature variation with a common water and propagule source. Both structural (i.e. biomass, stoichiometry, assemblage structure) and functional (i.e. metabolism, N2‐fixation, nutrient uptake) attributes of biofilms were measured on multiple dates to link changes in carbon flow explicitly to the dynamics of nitrogen and phosphorus. Temperature had strong positive effects on biofilm biomass (2.8‐ to 24‐fold variation) and net ecosystem productivity (44‐ to 317‐fold variation), despite extremely low concentrations of limiting dissolved nitrogen. Temperature had surprisingly minimal effects on biofilm stoichiometry: carbon:nitrogen (C:N) ratios were temperature‐invariant, while carbon:phosphorus (C:P) ratios declined slightly with increasing temperature. Biofilm communities were dominated by cyanobacteria at all temperatures (>91% of total biovolume) and N2‐fixation rates increased up to 120‐fold between the coldest and warmest treatments. Although ammonium‐N uptake increased with temperature (2.8‐ to 6.8‐fold variation), the much higher N2‐fixation rates supplied the majority of N to the ecosystem at higher temperatures. Our results demonstrate that temperature can alter how carbon is cycled and coupled to nitrogen and phosphorus. The uncoupling of C fixation from dissolved inorganic nitrogen supply produced large unexpected changes in biofilm development, elemental cycling, and likely downstream exports of nutrients and organic matter.
Keywords:benthic biofilms  climate change  coupled biogeochemical cycles  ecological stoichiometry  metabolism  N2‐fixation  nutrient uptake  temperature
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号