Matching Items (70)
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Description
The oceanic biological carbon pump is a key component of the global carbon cycle in which dissolved carbon dioxide is taken up by phytoplankton during photosynthesis, a fraction of which then sinks to depth and contributes to oceanic carbon storage. The small-celled phytoplankton (<5 µm) that dominate the phytoplankton community

The oceanic biological carbon pump is a key component of the global carbon cycle in which dissolved carbon dioxide is taken up by phytoplankton during photosynthesis, a fraction of which then sinks to depth and contributes to oceanic carbon storage. The small-celled phytoplankton (<5 µm) that dominate the phytoplankton community in oligotrophic oceans have traditionally been viewed as contributing little to export production due to their small size. However, recent studies have shown that the picocyanobacterium Synechococcus produces transparent exopolymer particles (TEP), the sticky matrix of marine aggregates, and forms abundant microaggregates (5-60 µm), which is enhanced under nutrient limited growth conditions. Whether other small phytoplankton species exude TEP and form microaggregates, and if these are enhanced under growth-limiting conditions remains to be investigated. This study aims to analyze how nutrient limitation affects TEP production and microaggregate formation of species that are found to be associated with sinking particles in the Sargasso Sea. The pico-cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus marinus (0.8 µm), the nano-diatom Minutocellus polymorphus (2 µm), and the pico-prasinophyte Ostreococcus lucimarinus (0.6 µm) were grown in axenic batch culture experiments under nutrient replete and limited conditions. It was hypothesized that phytoplankton subject to nutrient limitation will aggregate more than those under replete conditions due to an increased exudation of TEP and that Minutocellus would produce the most TEP and microaggregates while Prochlorococcus would produce the least TEP and microaggregates of the three phytoplankton groups. As hypothesized, nutrient limitation increased TEP concentration in all three species, however they were only significant in nitrogen-limited treatments of Prochlorococcus as well as nitrogen- and phosphorus-limited treatments of Minutocellus. Formation of microaggregates was significantly enhanced in Minutocellus and Ostreococcus cultures in distinct microaggregate size ranges. Minutocellus produced the most TEP per cell and aggregated at higher volume concentrations compared to Prochlorococcus and Ostreococcus. Surprisingly, Ostreococcus produced more TEP than Prochlorococcus and Minutocellus per unit cell volume. These findings show for the first time how nutrient limited conditions enhance TEP production and microaggregation of Prochlorococcus, Minutocellus, and Ostreococcus, providing a mechanism for their incorporation into larger, sinking particles and contribution to export production in oligotrophic oceans.
ContributorsShurtleff, Catrina (Author) / Neuer, Susanne (Thesis advisor) / Lomas, Michael W. (Committee member) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Under current climate conditions northern peatlands mostly act as C sinks; however, changes in climate and environmental conditions, can change the soil carbon decomposition cascade, thus altering the sink status. Here I studied one of the most abundant northern peatland types, poor fen, situated along a climate gradient from tundra

Under current climate conditions northern peatlands mostly act as C sinks; however, changes in climate and environmental conditions, can change the soil carbon decomposition cascade, thus altering the sink status. Here I studied one of the most abundant northern peatland types, poor fen, situated along a climate gradient from tundra (Daring Lake, Canada) to boreal forest (Lutose, Canada) to temperate broadleaf and mixed forest (Bog Lake, MN and Chicago Bog, NY) biomes to assess patterns of microbial abundance across the climate gradient. Principal component regression analysis of the microbial community and environmental variables determined that mean annual temperature (MAT) (r2=0.85), mean annual precipitation (MAP) (r2=0.88), and soil temperature (r2=0.77), were the top significant drivers of microbial community composition (p < 0.001). Niche breadth analysis revealed the relative abundance of Intrasporangiaceae, Methanobacteriaceae and Candidatus Methanoflorentaceae fam. nov. to increase when MAT and MAP decrease. The same analysis showed Spirochaetaceae, Methanosaetaceae and Methanoregulaceae to increase in relative abundance when MAP, soil temperature and MAT increased, respectively. These findings indicated that climate variables were the strongest predictors of microbial community composition and that certain taxa, especially methanogenic families demonstrate distinct patterns across the climate gradient. To evaluate microbial production of methanogenic substrates, I carried out High Resolution-DNA-Stable Isotope Probing (HR-DNA-SIP) to evaluate the active portion of the community’s intermediary ecosystem metabolic processes. HR-DNA-SIP revealed several challenges in efficiency of labelling and statistical identification of responders, however families like Veillonellaceae, Magnetospirillaceae, Acidobacteriaceae 1, were found ubiquitously active in glucose amended incubations. Differences in metabolic byproducts from glucose amendments show distinct patterns in acetate and propionate accumulation across sites. Families like Spirochaetaceae and Sphingomonadaceae were only found to be active in select sites of propionate amended incubations. By-product analysis from propionate incubations indicate that the northernmost sites were acetate-accumulating communities. These results indicate that microbial communities found in poor fen northern peatlands are strongly influenced by climate variables predicted to change under current climate scenarios. I have identified patterns of relative abundance and activity of select microbial taxa, indicating the potential for climate variables to influence the metabolic pathway in which carbon moves through peatland systems.
ContributorsSarno, Analissa Flores (Author) / Cadillo-Quiroz, Hinsby (Thesis advisor) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Committee member) / Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa (Committee member) / Childers, Daniel (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Some cyanobacteria can generate hydrogen (H2) under certain physiological conditions and are considered potential agents for biohydrogen production. However, they also present low amounts of H2 production, a reaction reversal towards H2 consumption, and O2 sensitivity. Most attempts to improve H2 production have involved genetic or metabolic engineering approaches. I

Some cyanobacteria can generate hydrogen (H2) under certain physiological conditions and are considered potential agents for biohydrogen production. However, they also present low amounts of H2 production, a reaction reversal towards H2 consumption, and O2 sensitivity. Most attempts to improve H2 production have involved genetic or metabolic engineering approaches. I used a bio-prospecting approach instead to find novel strains that are naturally more apt for biohydrogen production. A set of 36, phylogenetically diverse strains isolated from terrestrial, freshwater and marine environments were probed for their potential to produce H2 from excess reductant. Two distinct patterns in H2 production were detected. Strains displaying Pattern 1, as previously known from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, produced H2 only temporarily, reverting to H2 consumption within a short time and after reaching only moderately high H2 concentrations. By contrast, Pattern 2 cyanobacteria, in the genera Lyngbya and Microcoleus, displayed high production rates, did not reverse the direction of the reaction and reached much higher steady-state H2 concentrations. L. aestuarii BL J, an isolate from marine intertidal mats, had the fastest production rates and reached the highest steady-state concentrations, 15-fold higher than that observed in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Because all Pattern 2 strains originated in intertidal microbial mats that become anoxic in dark, it was hypothesized that their strong hydrogenogenic capacity may have evolved to aid in fermentation of the photosynthate. When forced to ferment, these cyanobacteria display similarly desirable characteristics of physiological H2 production. Again, L. aestuarii BL J had the fastest specific rates and attained the highest H2 concentrations during fermentation, which proceeded via a mixed-acid pathway to yield acetate, ethanol, lactate, H2, CO2 and pyruvate. The genome of L. aestuarii BL J was sequenced and bioinformatically compared to other cyanobacterial genomes to ascertain any potential genetic or structural basis for powerful H2 production. The association hcp exclusively in Pattern 2 strains suggests its possible role in increased H2 production. This study demonstrates the value of bioprospecting approaches to biotechnology, pointing to the strain L. aestuarii BL J as a source of useful genetic information or as a potential platform for biohydrogen production.
ContributorsKothari, Ankita (Author) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Thesis advisor) / Vermaas, Willem F J (Committee member) / Rittmann, Bruce (Committee member) / Torres, Cesar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description
There is a growing consensus that photodegradation accelerates litter decomposition in drylands, but the mechanisms are not well understood. In a previous field study examining how exposure to solar radiation affects decomposition of 12 leaf litter types over 34 months in the Sonoran Desert, litter exposed to UV/blue wavebands of

There is a growing consensus that photodegradation accelerates litter decomposition in drylands, but the mechanisms are not well understood. In a previous field study examining how exposure to solar radiation affects decomposition of 12 leaf litter types over 34 months in the Sonoran Desert, litter exposed to UV/blue wavebands of solar radiation decayed faster. The concentration of water-soluble compounds was higher in decayed litter than in new (recently senesced) litter, and higher in decayed litter exposed to solar radiation than other decayed litter. Microbial respiration of litter incubated in high relative humidity for 1 day was greater in decayed litter than new litter and greatest in decayed litter exposed to solar radiation. Respiration rates were strongly correlated with decay rates and water-soluble concentrations of litter. The objective of the current study was to determine why respiration rates were higher in decayed litter and why this effect was magnified in litter exposed to solar radiation. First, I evaluated whether photodegradation enhanced the quantity of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in litter by comparing DOC concentrations of photodegraded litter to new litter. Second, I evaluated whether photodegradation increased the quality of DOC for microbial utilization by measuring respiration of leachates with equal DOC concentrations after applying them to a soil inoculum. I hypothesized that water vapor sorption may explain differences in respiration among litter age or sunlight exposure treatments. Therefore, I assessed water vapor sorption of litter over an 8-day incubation in high relative humidity. Water vapor sorption rates over 1 and 8 days were slower in decayed than new litter and not faster in photodegraded than other decayed litter. However, I found that 49-78% of the variation in respiration could be explained by the relative amount of water litter absorbed over 1 day compared to 8 days, a measure referred to as relative water content. Decayed and photodegraded litter had higher relative water content after 1 day because it had a lower water-holding capacity. Higher respiration rates of decayed and photodegraded litter were attributed to faster microbial activation due to greater relative water content of that litter.
ContributorsBliss, Michael Scott (Author) / Day, Thomas A. (Thesis advisor) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Committee member) / Throop, Heather L. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Desert organisms lead harsh lives owing to the extreme, often unpredictable environmental conditions they endure. Climate change will likely make their existence even harsher. Predicting the ecological consequences of future climate scenarios thus requires understanding how the biota will be affected by climatic shifts. Biological soil crusts (biocrusts) are

Desert organisms lead harsh lives owing to the extreme, often unpredictable environmental conditions they endure. Climate change will likely make their existence even harsher. Predicting the ecological consequences of future climate scenarios thus requires understanding how the biota will be affected by climatic shifts. Biological soil crusts (biocrusts) are an important ecosystem component in arid lands, one that covers large portions of the landscape, improving soil stability and fertility. Because cyanobacteria are biocrust’s preeminent primary producers, eking out an existence during short pulses of precipitation, they represent a relevant global change object of study. I assessed how climate scenarios predicted for the Southwestern United States (US) will affect biocrusts using long-term, rainfall-modifying experimental set-ups that imposed either more intense drought, a seasonally delayed monsoon season, or a shift to smaller but more frequent precipitation events. I expected drought to be detrimental, but not a delay in the monsoon season. Surprisingly, both treatments showed similar effects on cyanobacterial community composition and population size after four years. While successionally incipient biocrusts were unaffected, mature biocrusts lost biomass and diversity with treatment, especially among nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria. In separate experiments, I assessed the effect of rainfall with modified event size and frequency after a decade of treatment. Small, frequent rainfall events surprisingly enhanced the diversity and biomass of bacteria and cyanobacteria, with clear winners and losers: nitrogen-fixing Scytonema sp. benefited, while Microcoleus vaginatus lost its dominance. As an additional finding, I could also show that water addition is not always beneficial to biocrusts, calling into question the notion that these are strictly water-limited systems.

Finally, results interpretation was severely hampered by a lack of appropriate systematic treatment for an important group of biocrust cyanobacteria, the “Microcoleus steenstrupii complex”. I characterized the complex using a polyphasic approach, leading to the formal description of a new family (Porphyrosiphonaceae) of desiccation resistant cyanobacteria that includes 11 genera, of which 5 had to be newly described. Under the new framework, the distribution and abundance of biocrust cyanobacteria with respect to environmental conditions can now be understood. This body of work contributes significantly to explain current distributional patterns of biocrust cyanobacteria and to predict their fate in the face of climate change.
ContributorsMoreira Camara Fernandes, Vanessa (Author) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Thesis advisor) / Rudgers, Jennifer (Committee member) / Sala, Osvaldo (Committee member) / Penton, Christopher (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
Description
Cyanobacteria and algae living inside carbonate rocks (endoliths) have long been considered major contributors to bioerosion. Some bore into carbonates actively (euendoliths); others simply inhabit pre-existing pore spaces (cryptoendoliths). While naturalistic descriptions based on morphological identification have traditionally driven the field, modern microbial ecology has shown that this approach is

Cyanobacteria and algae living inside carbonate rocks (endoliths) have long been considered major contributors to bioerosion. Some bore into carbonates actively (euendoliths); others simply inhabit pre-existing pore spaces (cryptoendoliths). While naturalistic descriptions based on morphological identification have traditionally driven the field, modern microbial ecology has shown that this approach is insufficient to assess microbial diversity or make functional inferences. I examined endolithic microbiomes using 16S rRNA genes and lipid-soluble photosynthetic pigments as biomarkers, with the goal of reassessing endolith diversity by contrasting traditional and molecular approaches. This led to the unexpected finding that in all 41 littoral carbonate microbiomes investigated around Isla de Mona (Puerto Rico) and Menorca (Spain) populations of anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria (APBs) in the phyla Chloroflexi and Proteobacteria, were abundant, even sometimes dominant over cyanobacteria. This was not only novel, but it suggested that APBs may have been previously misidentified as morphologically similar cyanobacteria, and opened questions about their potential role as euendoliths. To test the euendolithic role of photosynthetic microbes, I set a time-course experiment exposing virgin non-porous carbonate substrate in situ, under the hypothesis that only euendoliths would be able to initially colonize it. This revealed that endolithic microbiomes, similar in biomass to those of mature natural communities, developed within nine months of exposure. And yet, APB populations were still marginal after this period, suggesting that they are secondary colonizers and not euendolithic. However, elucidating colonization dynamics to a sufficiently accurate level of molecular identification among cyanobacteria required the development of a curated cyanobacterial 16S rRNA gene reference database and web tool, Cydrasil. I could then detect that the pioneer euendoliths were in a novel cyanobacterial clade (named UBC), immediately followed by cyanobacteria assignable to known euendoliths. However, as bioerosion proceeded, a diverse set of likely cryptoendolithic cyanobacteria colonized the resulting pore spaces, displacing euendoliths. Endolithic colonization dynamics are thus swift but complex, and involve functionally diverse agents, only some of which are euendoliths. My work contributes a phylogenetically sound, functionally more defined understanding of the carbonate endolithic microbiome, and more specifically, Cydrasil provides a user-friendly framework to routinely move beyond morphology-based cyanobacterial systematics.
ContributorsRoush, Daniel (Author) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Thesis advisor) / Anbar, Ariel (Committee member) / Cadillo-Quiroz, Hinsby (Committee member) / Cao, Huansheng (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
Modern agriculture faces multiple challenges: it must produce more food for a growing global population, adopt more efficient and sustainable management strategies, and adapt to climate change. One potential component of a sustainable management strategy is the application of biochar to agricultural soils. Biochar is the carbon-rich product of biomass

Modern agriculture faces multiple challenges: it must produce more food for a growing global population, adopt more efficient and sustainable management strategies, and adapt to climate change. One potential component of a sustainable management strategy is the application of biochar to agricultural soils. Biochar is the carbon-rich product of biomass pyrolysis, which contains large proportions of aromatic compounds that influence its stability in soil. Concomitant with carbon sequestration, biochar has the potential to increase soil fertility through increasing soil pH, moisture and nutrient retention. Changes in the soil physical and chemical properties can result in shifts in the soil microbiome, which are the proximate drivers of soil processes. This dissertation aims to determine the compositional and functional changes in the soil microbial community in response to the addition of a low-volatile matter biochar. First, the impact of biochar on the bacterial community was investigated in two important agricultural soils (Oxisol and Mollisol) with contrasting fertility under two different cropping systems (conventional sweet corn and zero-tillage napiergrass) one month and one year after the initial addition. This study revealed that the effects of biochar on the bacterial community were most pronounced in the Oxisol under napiergrass cultivation, however soil type was the strongest determinant of the bacterial community. A follow-up study was conducted using shotgun metagenomics to probe the functional community of soil microcosms, which contained Oxisol soil under napiergrass two years after the initial addition of biochar. Biochar significantly increased total carbon in the soils but had little impact on other soil properties. Theses analyses showed that biochar-amended soil microcosms exhibited significant shifts in the functional community and key metabolic pathways related to carbon turnover and denitrification. Given the distinct alterations to the biochar-amended community, deoxyribose nucleic acid (DNA) stable isotope probing was used to target the active populations. These analyses revealed that biochar did not significantly shift the active community in soil microcosms. Overall, these results indicate that the impact of biochar on the active soil community is transient in nature. Yet, biochar may still be a promising strategy for long-term carbon sequestration in agricultural soils.
ContributorsYu, Julian (Author) / Penton, C. Ryan (Thesis advisor) / Cadillo-Quiroz, Hinsby (Thesis advisor) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Committee member) / Hall, Sharon (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
I studied the molecular mechanisms of ultraviolet radiation mitigation (UVR) in the terrestrial cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme ATCC 29133, which produces the indole-alkaloid sunscreen scytonemin and differentiates into motile filaments (hormogonia). While the early stages of scytonemin biosynthesis were known, the late stages were not. Gene deletion mutants were interrogated by

I studied the molecular mechanisms of ultraviolet radiation mitigation (UVR) in the terrestrial cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme ATCC 29133, which produces the indole-alkaloid sunscreen scytonemin and differentiates into motile filaments (hormogonia). While the early stages of scytonemin biosynthesis were known, the late stages were not. Gene deletion mutants were interrogated by metabolite analyses and confocal microscopy, demonstrating that the ebo gene cluster, was not only required for scytonemin biosynthesis, but was involved in the export of scytonemin monomers to the periplasm. Further, the product of gene scyE was also exported to the periplasm where it was responsible for terminal oxidative dimerization of the monomers. These results opened questions regarding the functional universality of the ebo cluster. To probe if it could play a similar role in organisms other than scytonemin producing cyanobacteria, I developed a bioinformatic pipeline (Functional Landscape And Neighbor Determining gEnomic Region Search; FLANDERS) and used it to scrutinize the neighboring regions of the ebo gene cluster in 90 different bacterial genomes for potentially informational features. Aside from the scytonemin operon and the edb cluster of Pseudomonas spp., responsible for nematode repellence, no known clusters were identified in genomic ebo neighbors, but many of the ebo adjacent regions were enriched in signal peptides for export, indicating a general functional connection between the ebo cluster and biosynthetic compartmentalization. Lastly, I investigated the regulatory span of the two-component regulator of the scytonemin operon (scyTCR) using RNAseq of scyTCR deletion mutants under UV induction. Surprisingly, the knockouts had decreased expression levels in many of the genes involved in hormogonia differentiation and in a putative multigene regulatory element, hcyA-D. This suggested that UV could be a cue for developmental motility responses in Nostoc, which I could confirm phenotypically. In fact, UV-A simultaneously elicited hormogonia differentiation and scytonemin production throughout a genetically homogenous population. I show through mutant analyses that the partner-switching mechanism coded for by hcyA-D acts as a hinge between the scytonemin and hormogonia based responses. Collectively, this dissertation contributes to the understanding of microbial adaptive responses to environmental stressors at the genetic and regulatory level, highlighting their phenomenological and mechanistic complexity.
ContributorsKlicki, Kevin (Author) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Thesis advisor) / Wilson, Melissa (Committee member) / Mukhopadhyay, Aindrila (Committee member) / Misra, Rajeev (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
The ability to find evidence of life on early Earth and other planets is constrained by the current understanding of biosignatures and our ability to differentiate fossils from abiotic mimics. When organisms transition from the living realm to the fossil record, their morphological and chemical characteristics are modified, usually resulting

The ability to find evidence of life on early Earth and other planets is constrained by the current understanding of biosignatures and our ability to differentiate fossils from abiotic mimics. When organisms transition from the living realm to the fossil record, their morphological and chemical characteristics are modified, usually resulting in the loss of information. These modifications can happen during early and late diagenesis and differ depending on local geochemical properties. These post-depositional modifications need to be understood to better interpret the fossil record. Siliceous hot spring deposits (sinters) are of particular interest for biosignature research as they are early Earth analog environments and targets for investigating the presence of fossil life on Mars. As silica-supersaturated fluids flow from the vent to the distal apron, they precipitate non-crystalline opal-A that fossilizes microbial communities at a range in scales (μm-cm). Therefore, many studies have documented the ties between the active microbial communities and the morphological and chemical biosignatures in hot springs. However, far less attention has been placed on understanding preservation in systems with complex mineralogy or how post-depositional alteration affects the retention of biosignatures. Without this context, it can be challenging to recognize biosignatures in ancient rocks. This dissertation research aims to refine our current understanding of biosignature preservation and retention in sinters. Biosignatures of interest include organic matter, microfossils, and biofabrics. The complex nature of hot springs requires a comprehensive understanding of biosignature preservation that is representative of variable chemistries and post-depositional alterations. For this reason, this dissertation research chapters are field site-based. Chapter 2 investigates biosignature preservation in an unusual spring with mixed opal-A-calcite mineralogy at Lýsuhóll, Iceland. Chapter 3 tracks how silica diagenesis modifies microfossil morphology and associated organic matter at Puchuldiza, Chile. Chapter 4 studies the effects of acid fumarolic overprinting on biosignatures in Gunnuhver, Iceland. To accomplish this, traditional geologic methods (mapping, petrography, X-ray diffraction, bulk elemental analyses) were combined with high-spatial-resolution elemental mapping to better understand diagenetic effects in these systems. Preservation models were developed to predict the types and styles of biosignatures that can be present depending on the depositional and geochemical context. Recommendations are also made for the types of deposits that are most likely to preserve biosignatures.
ContributorsJuarez Rivera, Marisol (Author) / Farmer, Jack D (Thesis advisor) / Hartnett, Hilairy E (Committee member) / Shock, Everett (Committee member) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Committee member) / Trembath-Reichert, Elizabeth (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Biological soil crusts (BSCs) dominate the soil surface of drylands in the western United States and possess properties thought to influence local hydrology. Little agreement exists, however, on the effects of BSCs on runoff, infiltration, and evaporative rates. This study aims to improve the predictive capability of an ecohydrology model

Biological soil crusts (BSCs) dominate the soil surface of drylands in the western United States and possess properties thought to influence local hydrology. Little agreement exists, however, on the effects of BSCs on runoff, infiltration, and evaporative rates. This study aims to improve the predictive capability of an ecohydrology model in order to understand how BSCs affect the storage, retention, and infiltration of water into soils characteristic of the Colorado Plateau. A set of soil moisture measurements obtained at a climate manipulation experiment near Moab, Utah, are used for model development and testing. Over five years, different rainfall treatments over experimental plots resulted in the development of BSC cover with different properties that influence soil moisture differently. This study used numerical simulations to isolate the relative roles of different BSC properties on the hydrologic response at the plot-scale. On-site meteorological, soil texture and vegetation property datasets are utilized as inputs into a ecohydrology model, modified to include local processes: (1) temperature-dependent precipitation partitioning, snow accumulation and melt, (2) seasonally-variable potential evapotranspiration, (3) plant species-specific transpiration factors, and (4) a new module to account for the water balance of the BSC. Soil, BSC and vegetation parameters were determined from field measurements or through model calibration to the soil moisture observations using the Shuffled Complex Evolution algorithm. Model performance is assessed against five years of soil moisture measurements at each experimental site, representing a wide range of crust cover properties. Simulation experiments were then carried out using the calibrated ecohydrology model in which BSC parameters were varied according to the level of development of the BSC, as represented by the BSC roughness. These results indicate that BSCs act to both buffer against evaporative soil moisture losses by enhancing BSC moisture evaporation and significantly alter the rates of soil water infiltration by reducing moisture storage and increasing conductivity in the BSC. The simulation results for soil water infiltration, storage and retention across a wide range of meteorological events help explain the conflicting hydrologic outcomes present in the literature on BSCs. In addition, identifying how BSCs mediate infiltration and evaporation processes has implications for dryland ecosystem function in the western United States.
ContributorsWhitney, Kristen M (Author) / Vivoni, Enrique R (Thesis advisor) / Farmer, Jack D (Committee member) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015