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Changes in biocrust cover drive carbon cycle responses to climate change in drylands
Authors:Fernando T Maestre  Cristina Escolar  Mónica Ladrón de Guevara  José L Quero  Roberto Lázaro  Manuel Delgado‐Baquerizo  Victoria Ochoa  Miguel Berdugo  Beatriz Gozalo  Antonio Gallardo
Institution:1. área de Biodiversidad y Conservación, Departamento de Biología y Geología, Escuela Superior de Ciencias Experimentales y Tecnología, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, C/Tulipán s/n, Móstoles, 28933 Spain;2. Estación Experimental de Zonas áridas (CSIC), Carretera de Sacramento, s/n, La Ca?ada de San Urbano‐Almería, 04120 Spain;3. Departamento de Ingeniería Forestal, Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingeniería Agronómica y de Montes, Universidad de Córdoba, Campus de Rabanales, Crta. N‐IV km. 396, Córdoba, 14071 Spain;4. Departamento de Sistemas Físicos, Químicos y Naturales, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Carretera de Utrera km. 1, Sevilla, 41013 Spain
Abstract:Dryland ecosystems account for ca. 27% of global soil organic carbon (C) reserves, yet it is largely unknown how climate change will impact C cycling and storage in these areas. In drylands, soil C concentrates at the surface, making it particularly sensitive to the activity of organisms inhabiting the soil uppermost levels, such as communities dominated by lichens, mosses, bacteria and fungi (biocrusts). We conducted a full factorial warming and rainfall exclusion experiment at two semiarid sites in Spain to show how an average increase of air temperature of 2–3 °C promoted a drastic reduction in biocrust cover (ca. 44% in 4 years). Warming significantly increased soil CO2 efflux, and reduced soil net CO2 uptake, in biocrust‐dominated microsites. Losses of biocrust cover with warming through time were paralleled by increases in recalcitrant C sources, such as aromatic compounds, and in the abundance of fungi relative to bacteria. The dramatic reduction in biocrust cover with warming will lessen the capacity of drylands to sequester atmospheric CO2. This decrease may act synergistically with other warming‐induced effects, such as the increase in soil CO2 efflux and the changes in microbial communities to alter C cycling in drylands, and to reduce soil C stocks in the mid to long term.
Keywords:bacteria  biological soil crusts  carbon cycling  climate change  drylands  fungi  lichens  soil CO2 efflux  soil net CO2 exchange
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