4.8 Article

Decline in biological soil crust N-fixing lichens linked to increasing summertime temperatures

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2120975119

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biological soil crust; lichens; global change

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  1. USGS Ecosystem Mission Area and Canyonlands National Park

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This study examines the long-term effects of environmental variation and Bromus tectorum invasion on biocrust communities in a temperate dryland. The results show that climate change plays a key role in the decline of lichens, while mosses increase in cover following the invasion. The study suggests that warming may erode decades of disturbance protection and have long-term implications for temperate dryland ecosystems.
Biological soil crusts (biocrusts), comprised of mosses, lichens, and cyanobacteria, are key components to many dryland communities. Climate change and other anthropogenic disturbances are thought to cause a decline in mosses and lichens, yet few long-term studies exist to track potential shifts in these sensitive soil-surface communities. Using a unique long-term observational dataset from a temperate dryland with initial observations dating back to 1967, we examine the effects of 53 y of observed environmental variation and Bromus tectorum invasion on biocrust communities in a grassland never grazed by domestic livestock. Annual observations show a steep decline in N-fixing lichen cover (dominated by Collema species) from 1996 to 2002, coinciding with a period of extended drought, with Collema communities never able to recover. Declines in other lichen species were also observed, both in number of species present and by total cover, which were attributed to increasing summertime temperatures. Conversely, moss species gradually gained in cover over the survey years, especially following a large Bromus tectorum invasion at the study onset (ca. 1996 to 2001). These results support a growing body of studies that suggests climate change is a key driver in changes to certain components of late-successional biocrust communities. Results here suggest that warming may partially negate decades of protection from disturbance, with biocrust communities reaching a vital tipping point. The accelerated rate of ongoing warming observed in this study may have resulted in the loss of lichen cover and diversity, which could have long-term implications for global temperate dryland ecosystems.

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