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Ephemeral and intermittent streams are valuable sources of surface water support in the arid ecosystems of the Southwestern United States. These streams account for over 80% of the streams in the American Southwest and their importance has been indicated in many studies. Ephemeral and intermittent streams support a wide range

Ephemeral and intermittent streams are valuable sources of surface water support in the arid ecosystems of the Southwestern United States. These streams account for over 80% of the streams in the American Southwest and their importance has been indicated in many studies. Ephemeral and intermittent streams support a wide range of plant and animal species in both continuous and episodic fashions. This study aimed to gain a better understanding of the relationship between streamflow permanence and patterns of biomass and secondary production of the riparian fauna these ecosystems support. This was accomplished through a yearlong survey in the Huachuca Mountains of Southeastern, Arizona where macroinvertebrates were collected at various sites along a gradient of streamflow permanence before, during, and after the three month monsoon season that supplies most of the annual rainfall in this region. The results of my surveys indicate that 1) Sites characterized by low streamflow permanence were more responsive to changes in precipitation than sites characterized by relatively high streamflow permanence 2) In ephemeral streams, there is a significant peak in terrestrial macroinvertebrate production and biomass both during and after the monsoon season 3) streamflow permanence may convey consistent but not exceptional secondary production whereas seasonality in rainfall may convey exceptional but episodic secondary production—more so in sites where streamflow is not consistent.
ContributorsMcCartin, Michael Patrick (Author) / Sabo, John (Thesis director) / Stromberg, Juliet (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2014-05
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Land management practices such as domestic animal grazing can alter plant communities via changes in soil structure and chemistry, species composition, and plant nutrient content. These changes can affect the abundance and quality of plants consumed by insect herbivores with consequent changes in population dynamics. These population changes can translate

Land management practices such as domestic animal grazing can alter plant communities via changes in soil structure and chemistry, species composition, and plant nutrient content. These changes can affect the abundance and quality of plants consumed by insect herbivores with consequent changes in population dynamics. These population changes can translate to massive crop damage and pest control costs. My dissertation focused on Oedaleus asiaticus, a dominant Asian locust, and had three main objectives. First, I identified morphological, physiological, and behavioral characteristics of the migratory ("brown") and non-migratory ("green") phenotypes. I found that brown morphs had longer wings, larger thoraxes and higher metabolic rates compared to green morphs, suggesting that developmental plasticity allows greater migratory capacity in the brown morph of this locust. Second, I tested the hypothesis of a causal link between livestock overgrazing and an increase in migratory swarms of O. asiaticus. Current paradigms generally assume that increased plant nitrogen (N) should enhance herbivore performance by relieving protein-limitation, increasing herbivorous insect populations. I showed, in contrast to this scenario, that host plant N-enrichment and high protein artificial diets decreased the size and viability of O. asiaticus. Plant N content was lowest and locust abundance highest in heavily livestock-grazed fields where soils were N-depleted, likely due to enhanced erosion and leaching. These results suggest that heavy livestock grazing promotes outbreaks of this locust by reducing plant protein content. Third, I tested for the influence of dietary imbalance, in conjunction with high population density, on migratory plasticity. While high population density has clearly been shown to induce the migratory morph in several locusts, the effect of diet has been unclear. I found that locusts reared at high population density and fed unfertilized plants (i.e. high quality plants for O. asiaticus) had the greatest migratory capacity, and maintained a high percent of brown locusts. These results did not support the hypothesis that poor-quality resources increased expression of migratory phenotypes. This highlights a need to develop new theoretical frameworks for predicting how environmental factors will regulate migratory plasticity in locusts and perhaps other insects.
ContributorsCease, Arianne (Author) / Harrison, Jon (Thesis advisor) / Elser, James (Thesis advisor) / DeNardo, Dale (Committee member) / Quinlan, Michael (Committee member) / Sabo, John (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
Constructed treatment wetlands (CTW) are being increasingly utilized in urbanized areas as a cost-effective and environmentally-friendly method for treating wastewater. CTWs can be especially useful for urban areas in aridland environments because they facilitate the reuse of water during water shortages. In my study, I determined the rates

Constructed treatment wetlands (CTW) are being increasingly utilized in urbanized areas as a cost-effective and environmentally-friendly method for treating wastewater. CTWs can be especially useful for urban areas in aridland environments because they facilitate the reuse of water during water shortages. In my study, I determined the rates at which the aboveground and belowground emergent macrophytes sequestered nitrogen in a 42 ha aridland CTW in Phoenix, Arizona, USA. To do so, I measured foliar nitrogen content in aboveground and belowground biomass of three plant species groups (Typha latifolia + Typha domingensis, Schoenoplectus acutus + Schoenoplectus tabernaemontani, and Schoenoplectus californicus). Using these data, I calculated aboveground and belowground nitrogen budgets for the three species groups annually from 2011 to 2018.

Aboveground nitrogen content showed a maximum in 2011, decreasing until 2015, increasing again until 2017, and dropping in 2018; belowground nitrogen content showed the opposite temporal trend. Because foliar nitrogen content was assumed to be relatively constant over time, my data suggested that belowground nitrogen content increased between 2011 and 2015 and decreased between 2015 and 2017. Aboveground nitrogen content underwent fluctuations due to fluctuations in aboveground biomass. This occurred due to ‘thatching’, or events of widespread toppling of large macrophyte stands. The ratio of aboveground to belowground biomass can vary widely in the same CTW. My findings suggested that managing senesced aboveground plant material in CTWs may optimize the CTW’s ability to sequester nitrogen. Further research is needed to determine the best management strategies, as well as its possible implications.
ContributorsCrane, Austin Matthew (Author) / Childers, Daniel (Thesis director) / Sanchez, Christopher (Committee member) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / School of Sustainability (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2019-05
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Description
Climate change is making the arid southwestern U.S. (“Southwest”) warmer and drier. Decreases in water availability coupled with increases in episodic heat waves can pose extraordinary challenges for native riparian tree species to persist in their current ranges. However, the morpho-physiological mechanisms that these species deploy to cope with extreme

Climate change is making the arid southwestern U.S. (“Southwest”) warmer and drier. Decreases in water availability coupled with increases in episodic heat waves can pose extraordinary challenges for native riparian tree species to persist in their current ranges. However, the morpho-physiological mechanisms that these species deploy to cope with extreme temperature events are not well understood. Specifically, how do these species maintain leaf temperatures within a safe operational threshold in the extreme conditions found across the region? Morpho-physiological mechanisms influencing intraspecific local adaptation to thermal stress were assessed in Populus fremontii using two experimental common gardens. In a common garden located near the mid-point of this species’ thermal distribution, I studied coordinated traits that reflect selection for leaf thermal regulation through the measurement of 28 traits encompassing four different trait spectra: phenology, whole-tree architecture, and the leaf and wood economic spectrum. Also, I assessed how these syndromes resulted in more acquisitive and riskier water-use strategies that explained how warm-adapted populations exhibited lower leaves temperatures than cool-adapted populations. Then, I investigated if different water-use strategies are detectable at inter-annual temporal scales by comparing tree-ring growth, carbon, and oxygen isotopic measurements of cool- versus warm-adapted populations in a common garden located at the extreme hottest edge of P. fremontii’s thermal distribution. I found that P. fremontii’s adaptation to the extreme temperatures is explained by a highly intraspecific specialized trait coordination across multiple trait scales. Furthermore, I found that warmer-adapted populations displayed 39% smaller leaves, 38% higher midday stomatal conductance, reflecting 3.8 °C cooler mean leaf temperature than cool-adapted populations, but with the tradeoff of having 14% lower minimum leaf water potentials. In addition, warm-adapted genotypes at the hot edge of P. fremontii’s distribution had 20% higher radial growth rates, although no differences were detected in either carbon or oxygen isotope ratios indicating that differences in growth may not have reflected seasonal differences in photosynthetic gas exchange. These studies describe the potential effect that extreme climate might have on P. fremontii’s survival, its intraspecific responses to those events, and which traits will be advantageous to cope with those extreme environmental conditions.
ContributorsBlasini, Davis E (Author) / Hultine, Kevin R (Thesis advisor) / Day, Thomas A (Thesis advisor) / Ogle, Kiona (Committee member) / Throop, Heather (Committee member) / Gaxiola, Roberto (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Integrated water resources management for flood control, water distribution, conservation, and food security require understanding hydrological spatial and temporal trends. Proliferation of monitoring and sensor data has boosted data-driven simulation and evaluation. Developing data-driven models for such physical process-related phenomena, and meaningful interpretability therein, necessitates an inventive methodology. In this

Integrated water resources management for flood control, water distribution, conservation, and food security require understanding hydrological spatial and temporal trends. Proliferation of monitoring and sensor data has boosted data-driven simulation and evaluation. Developing data-driven models for such physical process-related phenomena, and meaningful interpretability therein, necessitates an inventive methodology. In this dissertation, I developed time series and deep learning model that connected rainfall, runoff, and fish species abundances. I also investigated the underlying explainabilty for hydrological processes and impacts on fish species. First, I created a streamflow simulation model using computer vision and natural language processing as an alternative to physical-based routing. I tested it on seven US river network sections and showed it outperformed time series models, deep learning baselines, and novel variants. In addition, my model explained flow routing without physical parameter input or time-consuming calibration. On the basis of this model, I expanded it from accepting dispersed spatial inputs to adopting comprehensive 2D grid data. I constructed a spatial-temporal deep leaning model for rainfall-runoff simulation. I tested it against a semi-distributed hydrological model and found superior results. Furthermore, I investigated the potential interpretability for rainfall-runoff process in both space and time. To understand impacts of flow variation on fish species, I applied a frequency based model framework for long term time series data simulation. First, I discovered that timing of hydrological anomalies was as crucial as their size. Flooding and drought, when properly timed, were both linked with excellent fishing productivity. To identify responses of various fish trait groups, I used this model to assess mitigated hydrological variation by fish attributes. Longitudinal migratory fish species were more impacted by flow variance, whereas migratory strategy species reacted in the same direction but to various degrees. Finally, I investigated future fish population changes under alternative design flow scenarios and showed that a protracted low flow with a powerful, on-time flood pulse would benefit fish. In my dissertation, I constructed three data-driven models that link the hydrological cycle to the stream environment and give insight into the underlying physical process, which is vital for quantitative, efficient, and integrated water resource management.
ContributorsDeng, Qi (Author) / Sabo, John (Thesis advisor) / Grimm, Nancy (Thesis advisor) / Ganguly, Auroop (Committee member) / Li, Wenwen (Committee member) / Mascaro, Giuseppe (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Stream metabolism is a critical indicator of ecosystem health and connects stream ecology to global change. Hence, understanding the controls of metabolism is essential because streams integrate land use and could be net sources or sinks of carbon dioxide (and methane) to the atmosphere. Eleven aridland streams in the southwestern

Stream metabolism is a critical indicator of ecosystem health and connects stream ecology to global change. Hence, understanding the controls of metabolism is essential because streams integrate land use and could be net sources or sinks of carbon dioxide (and methane) to the atmosphere. Eleven aridland streams in the southwestern US (Arizona) across a hydroclimatic and size (watershed area) gradient were surveyed, and gross primary production (GPP) and ecosystem respiration (ER) were modeled and averaged seasonally over a period of 2-4 years. The seasonal averaged GPP went as low as 0.001 g O2m-2d-1 (Ramsey Creek in 1st quarter of 2017) and as high as 14.6 g O2m-2d-1 (Santa Cruz River in 2nd quarter of 2017), whereas that of ER ranged from 0.003 (Ramsey Creek in 1st quarter of 2017) to 20.3 g O2m-2d-1 (Santa Cruz River in 2nd quarter of in 2017). The coefficient of variation (CV) of these GPP estimates within site ranged from 42% (Upper Verde River) to 157% (Wet Beaver Creek), with an average CV of GPP 91%, whereas the CV of ER ranged from 32% (Upper Verde River) to 247% (Ramsey Creek), with an average CV of ER 85%. Among 4 main categories of hypothetical predictors (hydrology, nutrient concentration, local environment, and size) on CV and point measurement of stream metabolism, the following conclusion was made: hydrologic variation only predicted the ER and CV of ER but not the GPP or CV of GPP; light and its CV controlled GPP and its CV, respectively, whereas temperature was one of the controlling factors for ER; CV of nutrient concentration was one of the drivers of CV of GPP, nitrate concentration was correlated with point measurement of GPP and ER while soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) concentration was only relevant to GPP; watershed area was correlated with CV of GPP, while depth mattered to both GPP and ER. My work will enhance our understanding of streams at multiple temporal and spatial scales and ultimately will benefit river management practice.
ContributorsLu, Mengdi (Author) / Grimm, Nancy (Thesis advisor) / Sabo, John (Thesis advisor) / Bang, Christofer (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Drylands cover over 40% of the Earth’s surface, account for one third of global carbon cycling, and are hotspots for climate change, with more frequent and severe droughts coupled with deluges of novel magnitude and frequency. Because of their large terrestrial extent, elucidating dryland ecosystem responses to changes in water

Drylands cover over 40% of the Earth’s surface, account for one third of global carbon cycling, and are hotspots for climate change, with more frequent and severe droughts coupled with deluges of novel magnitude and frequency. Because of their large terrestrial extent, elucidating dryland ecosystem responses to changes in water availability is critical for a comprehensive understanding of controls on global aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP), an important ecosystem service. The focus of this dissertation is to investigate cause-effect mechanisms between altered water availability and ecosystem processes in dryland ecosystems. Across a network of experimental rainfall manipulations within a semiarid Chihuahuan Desert grassland, I examined short- and long-term dynamics of multiple ecosystem processes—from plant phenology to nitrogen cycling—in response to directional precipitation extremes. Aboveground, I found herbaceous plant phenology to be more sensitive in greenup timing compared to deep-rooted, woody shrubs, implying that precipitation extremes will disproportionately affect grass-dominated compared to woody ecosystems. Surprisingly, after 14 years of experimentally adding water and N, I observed no effect on ANPP. Belowground, bulk soil N dynamics remained stable with differing precipitation amounts. However, mineral associated organic N (MAOM-N) significantly increased under chronic N inputs, indicating potential for dryland soil N sequestration. Conversely, the difference between low- and high-N soil N content may increase a drawdown of N from all soil N pools under low-N conditions whereas plants source N from fertilizer input under high-N conditions. Finally, I considered ecosystem-level acclimation to climate change. I found that N availability decreased with annual precipitation in space across continents, but it posed initially increasing trends in response to rainfall extremes at the Jornada that decreased after 14 years. Mechanisms for the acclimation process are thus likely associated with differential lags to changes in precipitation between plants and microorganisms. Overall, my dissertation demonstrates that examining linkages between multiple ecosystem processes, from aboveground phenological cycles to belowground N cycling dynamics, can provide a more integrative understanding of dryland response to climate change. Because dryland range is potentially expanding globally, water limited systems provide a unique and critical focus area for future research that revisit and revise current ecological paradigms.
ContributorsCurrier, Courtney (Author) / Sala, Osvaldo (Thesis advisor) / Collins, Scott (Committee member) / Reed, Sasha (Committee member) / Throop, Heather (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Xylem conduits, a primary feature of most terrestrial plant taxa, deliver water to photosynthetic tissues and play a critical role in plant water relations and drought tolerance. Non-succulent woody taxa generally follow a universal rate of tip-to-base conduit widening such that hydraulic resistance remains constant throughout the plant stem. Giant

Xylem conduits, a primary feature of most terrestrial plant taxa, deliver water to photosynthetic tissues and play a critical role in plant water relations and drought tolerance. Non-succulent woody taxa generally follow a universal rate of tip-to-base conduit widening such that hydraulic resistance remains constant throughout the plant stem. Giant cacti inhabit arid regions throughout the Americas and thrive in water-limited environments by complimenting water-storing succulent tissues with resource-efficient Crassulacean Acid Metabolism. Considering these adaptations, the objectives of this study were threefold: 1) determine whether xylem conduits in columnar cacti follow universal scaling theory as observed in woody taxa; 2) evaluate whether xylem hydraulic diameter is inversely correlated with xylem vessel density; and 3) determine whether xylem double-wall thickness-to-span ratio and other hydraulic architectural traits are convergent among phylogenetically diverse cactus species. This thesis investigates the xylem anatomy of nine cactus species native to the Sonoran Desert of Arizona and Mexico, the tropical dry forests of southern Mexico, and the Alto Plano region of Argentina. Soft xylem tissues closest to the stem apex underwent a modified polyethylene glycol treatment to stabilize for sectioning with a sledge microtome. Across all species: hydraulic diameter followed a basipetal widening rate of 0.21 (p < 0.001), closely matching the universal rate of 0.20 for woody taxa; and xylem vessel density was inversely correlated with both length from stem apex (p < 0.001) and hydraulic diameter (p < 0.001). Double-wall thickness-to-span ratio had little to no significant correlation with either length from stem apex or hydraulic diameter. There was no significant difference in hydraulic architectural trait patterns between phylogenetically diverse species with various stem morphologies, nor was there a significant correlation between conduit widening rates and volume-to-surface-area ratios. This study demonstrates that giant cacti follow similar internal anatomical constraints as non-succulent woody taxa, yet stem succulence and water storage behavior in cacti remain separate from internal hydraulic architecture, allowing cacti to thrive in arid environments. Understanding how cacti cope with severe water limitations provides new insights on evolutionary constraints of stem succulents as they functionally diverged from other life forms.
ContributorsCaspeta, Ivanna (Author) / Hultine, Kevin (Thesis advisor) / Throop, Heather (Thesis advisor) / Hernandez, Tania (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Terrestrial ecosystems are critical to human welfare and regulating Earth’s life support systems but many gaps in our knowledge remain regarding how terrestrial plant communities respond to changes in climate or human actions. I used field experiments distributed across three dryland ecosystems in North America to evaluate the consequences of

Terrestrial ecosystems are critical to human welfare and regulating Earth’s life support systems but many gaps in our knowledge remain regarding how terrestrial plant communities respond to changes in climate or human actions. I used field experiments distributed across three dryland ecosystems in North America to evaluate the consequences of changing precipitation and physical disturbance on plant community structure and function. Evidence from experiments and observational work exploring both plant community composition and ecological processes suggest that physical disturbance and precipitation reductions can reduce the diversity and function of these dryland ecosystems. Specifically, I found that aboveground net primary productivity could be reduced in an interactive manner when precipitation reductions and physical disturbance co-occur, and that within sites, this reduction in productivity was greater when growing-season precipitation was low. Further, I found that these dryland plant communities, commonly dominated by highly drought-resistant shrubs and perennial grasses, were not capable of compensating for the absence of these dominant shrubs and perennial grasses when they were removed by disturbance, and that precipitation reductions (as predicted to occur from anthropogenic climate change) exacerbate these gaps. Collectively, the results of the field experiment suggest that current management paradigms of maintaining cover and structure of native perennial plants in dryland systems are well founded and may be especially important as climate variability increases over time. Evaluating how these best management practices take place in the real world is an important extension of fundamental ecological research. To address the research-management gap in the context of dryland ecosystems in the western US, I used a set of environmental management plans and remotely sensed data to investigate how ecosystem services in drylands are accounted for, both as a supply from the land base and as a demand from stakeholders. Focusing on a less-investigated land base in the United States–areas owned and managed by the Department of Defense–I explored how ecosystem services are produced by this unique land management arrangement even if they are not explicitly managed for under current management schemes. My findings support a growing body of evidence that Department of Defense lands represent a valuable conservation opportunity, both for biodiversity and ecosystem services, if management regimes fully integrate the ecosystem services concept.
ContributorsJordan, Samuel (Author) / Grimm, Nancy (Thesis advisor) / Reed, Sasha (Committee member) / Wu, Jianguo (Committee member) / Throop, Heather (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
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Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is an important part of aquatic foodwebs because it contains carbon, nitrogen, and other elements required by heterotrophic organisms. It has many sources that determine its molecular composition, nutrient content, and biological lability and in turn, influence whether it is retained and processed in the stream

Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is an important part of aquatic foodwebs because it contains carbon, nitrogen, and other elements required by heterotrophic organisms. It has many sources that determine its molecular composition, nutrient content, and biological lability and in turn, influence whether it is retained and processed in the stream reach or exported downstream. I examined the composition of DOM from vascular wetland plants, filamentous algae, and riparian tree leaf litter in Sonoran Desert streams and its decomposition by stream microbes. I used a combination of field observations, in-situ experiments, and a manipulative laboratory incubation to test (1) how dominant primary producers influence DOM chemical composition and ecosystem metabolism at the reach scale and (2) how DOM composition and nitrogen (N) content control microbial decomposition and stream uptake of DOM. I found that differences in streamwater DOM composition between two distinct reaches of Sycamore Creek did not affect in-situ stream respiration and gross primary production rates. Stream sediment microbial respiration rates did not differ significantly when incubated in the laboratory with DOM from wetland plants, algae, and leaf litter, thus all sources were similarly labile. However, whole-stream uptake of DOM increased from leaf to algal to wetland plant leachate. Desert streams have the potential to process DOM from leaf, wetland, and algal sources, though algal and wetland DOM, due to their more labile composition, can be more readily retained and mineralized.
ContributorsKemmitt, Kathrine (Author) / Grimm, Nancy (Thesis advisor) / Hartnett, Hilairy (Committee member) / Throop, Heather (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018