4.4 Article

Production of greenhouse-grown biocrust mosses and associated cyanobacteria to rehabilitate dryland soil function

Journal

RESTORATION ECOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 324-335

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/rec.12311

Keywords

biocrust cultivation; biological soil crust; C and nitrogen fixation; dryland rehabilitation technology; dryland restoration material; Syntrichia spp.

Categories

Funding

  1. Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program [RC-2329]
  2. Northern Arizona University's Faculty Grants Program

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Mosses are an often-overlooked component of dryland ecosystems, yet they are common members of biological soil crust communities (biocrusts) and provide key ecosystem services, including soil stabilization, water retention, carbon fixation, and housing of N-2 fixing cyanobacteria. Mosses are able to survive long dry periods, respond rapidly to precipitation, and reproduce vegetatively. With these qualities, drylandmosses have the potential to be an excellent dryland restoration material. Unfortunately, dryland mosses are often slow growing in nature, and ex situ cultivation methods are needed to enhance their utility. Our goal was to determine how to rapidly produce, vegetatively, Syntrichia caninervis and S. ruralis, common and abundant moss species in drylands of North America and elsewhere, in a greenhouse. We manipulated the length of hydration on a weekly schedule (5, 4, 3, or 2 days continuous hydration per week), crossed with fertilization (once at the beginning, monthly, biweekly, or not at all). Moss biomass increased sixfold for both species in 4 months, an increase that would require years under dryland field conditions. Both moss species preferred short hydration and monthly fertilizer. Remarkably, we also unintentionally cultured a variety of other important biocrust organisms, including cyanobacteria and lichens. In only 6 months, we produced functionally mature biocrusts, as evidenced by high productivity and ecosystem-relevant levels of N-2 fixation. Our results suggest that biocrust mossesmight be the ideal candidate for biocrust cultivation for restoration purposes. With optimization, these methods are the first step in developing a moss-based biocrust rehabilitation technology.

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