Matching Items (3)
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Drylands cover almost half of the land surface on Earth, yet there is still little understood of the processes in these ecosystems. This project studied the impact of macroclimate (precipitation and temperature in large regions) in comparison to microclimate (the climate under canopy versus in the open) to learn more

Drylands cover almost half of the land surface on Earth, yet there is still little understood of the processes in these ecosystems. This project studied the impact of macroclimate (precipitation and temperature in large regions) in comparison to microclimate (the climate under canopy versus in the open) to learn more about the drivers of litter decomposition in drylands.

ContributorsMcGroarty, Megan (Author) / Throop, Heather (Thesis director) / Trembath-Reichert, Elizabeth (Committee member) / Reed, Sasha (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of International Letters and Cultures (Contributor) / School of Earth and Space Exploration (Contributor) / School of Sustainability (Contributor)
Created2021-12
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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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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