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Biological Soil Crust Microsites Are the Main Contributor to Soil Respiration in a Semiarid Ecosystem
Authors:Andrea P. Castillo-Monroy  Fernando T. Maestre  Ana Rey  Santiago Soliveres  Pablo García-Palacios
Affiliation:1.área de Biodiversidad y Conservación, Departamento de Biología y Geología, Escuela Superior de Ciencias Experimentales y Tecnología,Universidad Rey Juan Carlos,Móstoles,Spain;2.Estación Experimental de Zonas áridas,EEZA-CSIC,Almería,Spain;3.Instituto de Recursos Naturales,Centro de Ciencias Medioambientales, C.S.I.C.,Madrid,Spain
Abstract:Biological soil crusts (BSCs) are a key biotic component of dryland ecosystems worldwide. However, most studies carried out to date on carbon (C) fluxes in these ecosystems, such as soil respiration, have neglected them. We conducted a 3.5-year field experiment to evaluate the spatio-temporal heterogeneity of soil respiration in a semiarid Stipa tenacissima steppe and to assess the contribution of BSC-dominated areas to the annual soil respiration of the whole ecosystem. We selected the six most frequent microsites in the study area: Stipa tussocks (ST), Retama sphaerocarpa shrubs (RS), and open areas with very low (<5% BSC cover, BS), low, medium and high cover of well-developed BSCs. Soil respiration rates did not differ among BSC-dominated microsites but were significantly higher and lower than those found in BS and ST microsites, respectively. A model using soil temperature and soil moisture accounted for over 85% of the temporal variation in soil respiration throughout the studied period. Using this model, we estimated a range of 240.4–322.6 g C m−2 y−1 released by soil respiration at our study area. Vegetated (ST and RS) and BSC-dominated microsites accounted for 37 and 42% of this amount, respectively. Our results indicate that accounting for the spatial heterogeneity in soil respiration induced by BSCs is crucial to provide accurate estimations of this flux at the ecosystem level. They also highlight that BSC-dominated areas are the main contributor to the total C released by soil respiration and, therefore, must be considered when estimating C budgets in drylands.
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