The role of physical and biological soil crusts on the water balance in semiarid ecosystems

The role of physical and biological soil crusts on the water balance in semiarid ecosystems
Author: Sonia Chamizo de la Piedra
Publisher: Universidad Almería
Total Pages: 235
Release: 2014-11-06
Genre:
ISBN: 8416027358

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In arid and semiarid areas, the interplant spaces are usually covered by physical and biological soil crusts. These crusts, though representing an almost negligible portion of the soil profile, have a number of crucial roles. Soil crusts form the boundary between soil and atmosphere and therefore control gas, water and nutrient exchange into and through soils. Concretely, in the last decade, the study of biological soil crusts (BSCs) (complex communities of cyanobacteria, algae, fungi, lichens, mosses and other microorganisms in intimate association with soil particles) has drawn the attention of a growing number of researchers due to the key role they play in numerous processes in the ecosystems where they appear. Unlike physical crusts, BSCs protect soils against erosion by water and wind, and increase soil fertility by fixing atmospheric C and N, synthesising polysaccharides and reducing nutrient losses by runoff and erosion. Through their influence on numerous properties that affect how water moves though soils such as roughness, porosity, hydrophobicity, cracking, and albedo, BSCs play a key role in water processes, such as infiltration and runoff, evaporation and soil moisture. It is widely known the role of physical crusts in decreasing soil porosity and hydraulic conductivity, thus decreasing infiltration. However, there is controversy regarding the role of BSCs in infiltration and runoff processes. Some studies indicate that BSCs increase infiltration, and consequently, decrease runoff, whereas others have reported that they decrease infiltration and increase runoff or that they have no effect on either of them. In addition, the influence of BSCs on other soil water balance components such as evaporation and soil moisture has hardly been studied and the scarce existing studies also show contradicting results. With the aim of enlightening the role that BSCs play in the water balance in semiarid areas, in this thesis it has been analysed the influence of different soil crust types, physical crusts and various developmental stages of BSCs, on key soil water balance components such as infiltration-runoff, evaporation and soil moisture, at plot scale. Furthermore, to better understand how these crusts affect hydrological processes, the influence of the type of crust and developmental stage of the crust on different properties that affect water movement and retention in soils has been analysed. Last, spectral characteristics of the different crust types, as well as of vegetation, have been examined with the aim of developing a spectral classification system for differentiation of these common ground covers in semiarid areas that allows their mapping and the modelling of the effects of the crusted areas on hydrological and erosion processes on larger spatial scales (hillslope and catchment). To conduct this research, two areas where BSCs are widespread and that represent key spatial distributions of BSCs in semiarid ecosystems were chosen in the province of Almeria (SE Spain): El Cautivo (in the Tabernas Desert), a badlands catchment with silty-loam textured soils, and Las Amoladeras (in the Cabo de Gata-Níjar Natural Park), a flat area with sandy-loam textured soils. Our results show that BSCs increase aggregate stability, water retention capacity, and organic carbon and total nitrogen content compared to physical crusts and, within BSCs, these properties increase in the crust and the underlying soil as the crust is more developed (in terms of greater biomass and later-successional species composition). The increase in soil properties with the presence of BSCs is especially noticeable in the top layer of soil (0.01 m) and decreases with depth (0.01-0.05 m) (Chapter I). Through their effect increasing surface roughness and physico-chemical soil properties, BSCs increase infiltration and decrease runoff compared to physical crusts. In general, infiltration increases with greater BSC development (Chapter II). However, there are exceptions to this general pattern that are conditioned by other factors such as the spatial scale under study or the type of rainfall. At small plot sizes (0.25 m2) and after 1h-high intensity simulated rainfall (50 mmh-1), we found that well-developed BSCs such as lichens, generate higher runoff rates than less developed BSCs as cyanobacteria, and similar runoff rates to physical crusts (Chapter II). Thus, at microplot scales and under extreme events, the effect of well-developed BSCs in enhancing infiltration due to their greater roughness can be overcome by their ability to clog soil pores when wet, thus increasing runoff. However, when the influence of BSCs on infiltration and runoff is analysed under natural rain events and at larger spatial scales (1-10 m2), we found that, in low intensity rainfalls, runoff decreases with the cover of well-developed BSCs (lichens) and this effect is higher as the plot size increases (Chapter III). Such decrease in runoff with the presence of well-developed BSCs is due to the microtopography that these crusts confer to soils. Under high intensity rainfalls, BSC cover has no significant effect on runoff yield and the main factor acting to determine runoff generation is rainfall intensity (Chapter III). The removal of the crust initially causes infiltration to increase. But this effect diminishes over time as raindrop impact reseals the surface and a new physical crust is formed that increases runoff (Chapter II). Moreover, crust disturbance by trampling but, especially by removal, causes a dramatic increase in erosion (Chapter II). Erosion also depends on the type of BSC. Well-developed crusts as lichens and mosses generate lower erosion rates than less developed crusts as cyanobacteria. Regarding the influence of BSCs on soil evaporation, under saturation conditions and warm ambient temperatures, soil water loss is quick in all types of surfaces and no significant differences are found in soils with or without BSCs (Chapter V). However, during long cold wet periods, soil water loss is faster in soils devoid of BSCs than in those covered by them. Thus, BSC-crusted soils maintain more soil moisture at the upper soil layer (0.03 m) than adjacent soils where the BSC has been removed, during wet periods. At deeper soil (0.10 m), soil moisture is similar in both BSC-crusted and uncrusted soils. The removal of the BSC causes a higher decrease in soil moisture in fine-textured soils (Cautivo), where the presence of BSCs has a stronger influence on increasing porosity and infiltration, than in coarse-textured soils (Las Amoladeras). During dry soil periods, soil moisture is similar in soils with or without BSCs (Chapter V). Last, a quantitative analysis of spectral characteristics of vegetation, physical crusts and BSC developmental stages has demonstrated the possibility of classifying these common ground covers in semiarid areas based on distinctive spectral features (Chapter VI). The application of the classification system developed to multi and hiperspectral provides the possibility for future mapping of spatial distribution and temporal dynamics of BSCs, which is crucial to incorporating the effects of crusted surfaces in current hydrological and erosion models. Summarizing, compared to physical crusts, the presence of BSCs increase physico-chemical properties of underlying soils, especially in the first centimeters of soil, and this enhancement is greater as the BSC is more developed. Due to this increase in soil properties and the higher roughness that BSCs provide to soils, BSCs increase water input by increasing infiltration and soil moisture, and soil moisture, and reduce water output by reducing soil evaporation. Hence, compared to physical crusts, the presence of BSCs and, especially the presence of well-developed BSCs, have an overall positive effect on the local water balance in semiarid ecosystems, in addition to having a major role in protecting soils from erosion.

Cross-scale effects of biological soil crusts on runoff generation and water erosion in semiarid ecosystems. Field data and model approach

Cross-scale effects of biological soil crusts on runoff generation and water erosion in semiarid ecosystems. Field data and model approach
Author: Emilio Rodríguez Caballero
Publisher: Universidad Almería
Total Pages: 271
Release: 2014-11-06
Genre:
ISBN: 8416027366

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CD-ROM Water availability is one of the main limiting factors that control ecosystem functions and productivity in semiarid regions. Vegetation of these regions usually presents a patchy distribution where sparse plant cover is interspersed over a bare soil. During the few rainfall events, runoff is generated in non-vegetated areas and redistributed towards vegetation, which act as surface obstruction for water, sediments and nutrients. Thus, non-vegetated areas are more susceptible to water erosion processes. Non-vegetated areas from semiarid ecosystems around the world, are often covered by Biological Soil Crusts (BSCs). BSCs result from an intimate association between soil particles and cyanobacteria, algae, microfungi, lichens and bryophytes. These communities live within, or immediately on top of, the uppermost millimeters of soil, influencing soil surface properties involved in infiltration, runoff generation and water erosion. Several papers have demonstrated that BSCs are one of the most important soil stabilizing factors in drylands. There are, however, contradictory results on the role that BSCs play in regulating soil water fluxes. Some studies point BSCs as runoff sources that may increase downslope erosion or on the contrary may represent an additional supply of water for downslope vegetation allowing its survival. The impact of this additional runoff should be evaluated at less detailed scales than the patch and to analyze all interactions in terms of water, sediments and nutrients between areas covered by BSCs and vegetated patches in order to establish the real effects of BSCs on both runoff and erosion. Also, to correctly predict the impact of future climate changes or antropic disturbances on hydrological behavior and water erosion in systems dominated by BSCs their effects should be included on spatially distributed runoff and erosion models. Until now, the influence of BSCs on these processes has been addressed almost exclusively at patch scale, despite the fact some authors have pointed the need of upscaling their effects, and even more their influence on runoff generation and water erosion was never considered in spatially implicit medelling. The goal of this thesis is to determine BSC effects on runoff and water erosion from plot to catchment scale in a typical semiarid ecosystem. To achieve this objective, first direct and indirect effects of BSCs at patch scale must be clearly defined under natural rainfall conditions to solve the controversy about BSCs effects on runoff generation. To know the direct and indirect relationships among soil surface characteristics, BSC cover and type, topography, rainfall characteristics (duration, amount and intensity) and runoff, structural equation models (SEM) were applied. Our results reveal the critical importance of BSCs on runoff and water erosion. Both processes in biologically crusted areas are directly controlled by crust type and cover. BSCs also modified some soil surface properties involved in runoff generation and water erosion, such as microtopography, surface stability or water repellency. The final interaction of both, direct and indirect BSCs effects, determine the hydrological behavior of these surfaces under natural rainfall conditions. Moreover, the final effect of BSCs on runoff generation is strongly driven by rainfall properties, which determined the set of complex interactions among BSCs, type and developmental stage and soil surface properties: on one hand, during low intensity rains, BSC-induced microtopography increases the amount of surface micro-depressions, which act as temporal water sinks, reducing the connectivity among source areas, delaying runoff initiation and reducing runoff rates; on the other hand, during intense rainfall events, BSCs type and water repellency are the main factors determining runoff generation. When the effects of BSCs are analyzed at coarser scales, including all interactions among BSCs and vegetated areas on a whole catchment, our results reveal the importance of the interactions between areas with BSCs and areas with vegetation on runoff generation and water erosion. We show the capacity of vegetated areas to retain runoff waters generated by upslope biologically crusted areas as an important driver for the hydrological and erosional response at catchment scale. However, the capability of vegetated areas to trap and retain water and sediments is limited and can be exceeded during high magnitude events, increasing catchment connectivity, as well as runoff and water erosion at the catchment outlet. Even during high-magnitude events, when the runoff generated in BSC areas reaches the channel network, the local protection provided by BSCs also affects downslope areas and the catchment response. These results confirm that BSCs must be included in runoff and soil erosion models to obtain reliable predictions of the spatial pattern of runoff and water erosion in catchments with abundant BSCs. In order to correctly introduce the effects of BSCs in these models, it is necessary to have an accurate spatial characterization of BSCs. It is shown that a spectral mixture analysis is required for the precise characterization of the complex spatial distribution of BSCs, due to the intrinsic spatial heterogeneity of semiarid ecosystems and to the spectral similarities among BSCs, dry vegetation and bare soil. Due to the methodological and practical application problems of spectral mixture analysis when it is applied to spectrally complex areas or when some surface elements only appear in specific areas of the image, we needed to develop a novel methodology for BSCs classification and quantification (lichen and cyanobacteria-dominated CBS), based on hyperspectral images. Support vector machine classification was applied for spectral and ecological classification of homogenous areas to solve the mentioned problems inherent to spatial heterogeneity. Inmediately afterwards, spectral mixture analysis (SMA) was applied to each SVM class to quantify the proportion of each type of surface cover within each pixel. Relative abundance images obtained with this methodology achieve a relatively high accuracy for different types of BSCs, and have demonstrated to be an adequate source of spatially distributed information, to correctly characterize surface properties in biologically crusted drylands systems. Moreover, to have the spatial distribution of type and abundance of BSCs allows to increase the accuracy of modeled runoff and erosion. Thus, when BSCs effects are not included in the LISEM model, an important increase in modeled water erosion was observed in areas where BSCs was not considered.

Biological Soil Crusts: Spatio-temporal Development and Ecological Functions of Soil Surface Microbial Communities across Different Scales

Biological Soil Crusts: Spatio-temporal Development and Ecological Functions of Soil Surface Microbial Communities across Different Scales
Author: Shubin Lan
Publisher: Frontiers Media SA
Total Pages: 339
Release: 2024-08-09
Genre: Science
ISBN: 2832553028

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Biological soil crusts (biocrusts) are widely distributed throughout the world, and cover approximately 12% of the terrestrial surface. Biocrusts are composed of cyanobacteria, algae, lichens, mosses, and a great diversity of other microorganisms, which bind soil particles together to form a layer of biological-soil matrix on the soil surface typically of several millimetres thickness. They are important sites of regional and global microbial diversity and perform multiple ecological functions (multifunctionality). During the evolution of terrestrial life on earth, biocrusts are regarded as the main colonising photosynthetic organisms before the advent of vascular vegetation. They not only represent the early stages of terrestrial ecosystems, but also facilitate the ecosystem’s development and succession. Therefore, biocrusts are recognised as ecological engineers in the natural development of ecosystems and for the restoration of degraded terrestrial ecosystems. The development of biocrusts is highly heterogeneous, which is reflected on both temporal and spatial scales, and this heterogeneity is still clearly visible even in a small scale. However, up to now, only limited knowledge is acquired on biocrust temporal and spatial organisation. In particular there still is a large knowledge gap regarding the various biocrust communities under different developmental states and their related physiological metabolisms and ecological functions. Therefore, in-depth studies of these issues will undoubtedly further promote our understanding of the heterogeneous development of biocrusts, as well as their ecological multifunctionality in terrestrial ecosystems. The relevant contributions are expected to provide a scientific basis for the management of biocrusts and technology development (e.g. cyanobacteria-induced biocrust technology) for ecological restoration and the promotion of soil health.

Physical Aspects of Soil Water and Salts in Ecosystems

Physical Aspects of Soil Water and Salts in Ecosystems
Author: A. Hadas
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 455
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3642655238

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The papers collected in this book were given and discussed at the symposium on "Soil water physics and technology", which was held in Rehovot, Israel, from August 19th-September 4th, 1971. It was sponsored by the International Society of Soil Science (1.S.S.S.) through its Commissions I (soil physics) and VI (soil technology), and organized by the Israeli Soil Science Society. Thanks are due to the Editors for having assembled contributions and discussion remarks into a well-rounded, coherent book. The subjects covered in this book are the theoretical and practical aspects of the following topics: water movement in soils, soil-water interactions, evaporation from soil and plants, water requirements of crops, ion activity and migration in soils, soilwater management and salinity. In as much as these contributions were not solicited, they represent ideas and subjects considered important by the authors and debators. In science, one often finds a gap between basic research and practical application. If reading this book creates a feeling of an apparent lack of balance between theory and practice, this represents the state of our science today, and the thoughtful reader can and will recognize that much remains to be done. W. R. GARDNER T.]. MAR5HAL President, Commission I President, Commission VI 1.5.5.5.

Biological Soil Crusts: An Organizing Principle in Drylands

Biological Soil Crusts: An Organizing Principle in Drylands
Author: Bettina Weber
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 540
Release: 2016-05-21
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 3319302140

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This volume summarizes our current understanding of biological soil crusts (biocrusts), which are omnipresent in dryland regions. Since they cover the soil surface, they influence, or even control, all surface exchange processes. Being one of the oldest terrestrial communities, biocrusts comprise a high diversity of cyanobacteria, algae, lichens and bryophytes together with uncounted bacteria, and fungi. The authors show that biocrusts are an integral part of dryland ecosystems, stabilizing soils, influencing plant germination and growth, and playing a key role in carbon, nitrogen and water cycling. Initial attempts have been made to use biocrusts as models in ecological theory. On the other hand, biocrusts are endangered by local disruptions and global change, highlighting the need for enhanced recovery methods. This book offers a comprehensive overview of the fascinating field of biocrust research, making it indispensable not only for scientists in this area, but also for land managers, policy makers, and anyone interested in the environment.

Ecology of Desert Systems

Ecology of Desert Systems
Author: Walter G. Whitford
Publisher: Academic Press
Total Pages: 473
Release: 2019-08-20
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0081026552

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Nearly one-third of the land area on our planet is classified as arid or desert. Therefore, an understanding of the dynamics of such arid ecosystems is essential to managing those systems in a way that sustains human populations. This second edition of Ecology of Desert Systems provides a clear, extensive guide to the complex interactions involved in these areas. This book details the relationships between abiotic and biotic environments of desert ecosystems, demonstrating to readers how these interactions drive ecological processes. These include plant growth and animal reproductive success, the spatial and temporal distribution of vegetation and animals, and the influence of invasive species and anthropogenic climate change specific to arid systems. Drawing on the extensive experience of its expert authors, Ecology of Desert Systems is an essential guide to arid ecosystems for students looking for an overview of the field, researchers keen to learn how their work fits in to the overall picture, and those involved with environmental management of desert areas. Highlights the complexity of global desert systems in a clear, concise way Reviews the most current issues facing researchers in the field, including the spread of invasive species due to globalized trade, the impact of industrial mining, and climate change Updated and extended to include information on invasive species management, industrial mining impacts, and the current and future role of climate change in desert systems

Biological Soil Crusts: Structure, Function, and Management

Biological Soil Crusts: Structure, Function, and Management
Author: Jayne Belnap
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 496
Release: 2013-12-01
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3642564755

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In arid lands, where vegetation is sparse or absent, the open ground is not bare but generally covered by a community of small, highly specialized organisms. Cyanobacteria, algae, microfungi, lichens, and bryophytes aggregate soil particles to form a coherent skin - the biological soil crust. It stabilizes and protects the soil surface from erosion by wind and water, influences water runoff and infiltration, and contributes nitrogen and carbon to desert soils. Soil surface disturbance, such as heavy livestock grazing, human trampling or off-road vehicles, breaks up the fragile soil crust, thus compromising its stability, structure, and productivity. This book is the first synthesis of the biology of soil crusts and their importance as an ecosystem component. Composition and functioning of different soil-crust types are discussed, and case studies are used to show the impact of crusts on landscape hydrology, soil stability, nutrient cycles, and land management.

The Biology of Arid Soils

The Biology of Arid Soils
Author: Blaire Steven
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2017-07-24
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 3110419149

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Soils have been called the most complex microbial ecosystems on Earth. A single gram of soil can harbor millions of microbial cells and thousands of species. However, certain soil environments, such as those experiencing dramatic change exposing new initial soils or that are limited in precipitation, limit the number of species able to survive in these systems. In this respect, these environments offer unparalleled opportunities to uncover the factors that control the development and maintenance of complex microbial ecosystems. This book collects chapters that discuss the abiotic factors that structure arid and initial soil communities as well as the diversity and structure of the biological communities in these soils from viruses to plants.