Cyanobacterial ecology across environmental gradients and spatial scales in China's hot and cold deserts
Open Access
- 1 September 2007
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in FEMS Microbiology Ecology
- Vol. 61 (3), 470-482
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-6941.2007.00351.x
Abstract
Lithic photoautotrophic communities function as principal primary producers in the world's driest deserts, yet many aspects of their ecology remain unknown. This is particularly true for Asia, where some of the Earth's oldest and driest deserts occur. Using methods derived from plant landscape ecology, we measured the abundance and spatial distribution of cyanobacterial colonization on quartz stony pavement across environmental gradients of rainfall and temperature in the isolated Taklimakan and Qaidam Basin deserts of western China. Colonization within available habitat ranged from 0.37±0.16% to 12.6±1.8%, with cold dry desert sites exhibiting the lowest abundance. Variation between sites was most strongly correlated with moisture-related variables and was independent of substrate availability. Cyanobacterial communities were spatially aggregated at multiple scales in patterns distinct from the underlying rock pattern. Site-level differences in cyanobacterial spatial pattern (e.g. mean inter-patch distance) were linked with rainfall, whereas patchiness within sites was correlated with local geology (greater colonization frequency of large rocks) and biology (dispersal during rainfall). We suggest that cyanobacterial patchiness may also in part be self-organized – that is, an outcome of soil water-biological feedbacks. We propose that landscape ecology concepts and models linking desert vegetation, biological feedbacks and ecohydrological processes are applicable to microbial communities.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hypolithic Colonization of Opaque Rocks in the Arctic and Antarctic Polar DesertArctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research, 2006
- Correlates of biological soil crust abundance across a continuum of spatial scales: support for a hierarchical conceptual modelJournal of Applied Ecology, 2006
- LINKAGES BETWEEN MICROBIAL AND HYDROLOGIC PROCESSES IN ARID AND SEMIARID WATERSHEDSEcology, 2005
- Bacterial Life and Dinitrogen Fixation at a Gypsum RockApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2004
- VARIATION IN BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND SOIL BIODIVERSITY ACROSS SPATIAL SCALES IN A POLAR DESERT ECOSYSTEMEcology, 2004
- Widespread colonization by polar hypolithsNature, 2004
- Ionizing-Radiation Resistance in the Desiccation-Tolerant Cyanobacterium ChroococcidiopsisApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2000
- Interrelationships between plant functional types and soil moisture heterogeneity for semiarid landscapes within the grassland/forest continuum: a unified conceptual modelLandscape Ecology, 1999
- CRYPTOENDOLITHIC ALGAE OF HOT SEMIARID LANDS AND DESERTSJournal of Phycology, 1993
- [3] Culturing methods for cyanobacteriaPublished by Elsevier ,1988