Crustivorous macro-arthropods regulate the microtopography and carbon dynamics of biological soil crusts

Nevo Sagi*, Amir Sagy, Vincent J.M.N.L. Felde, Dror Hawlena

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Biological soil crusts (biocrusts) play key roles in dryland ecosystem processes by mediating soil surface conditions. How consumption by macro-arthropods affects biocrust surface roughness and carbon cycling remains largely unknown. In two separate experiments, we addressed this knowledge gap by exposing biocrusts to varying levels of desert isopod crustivory (i.e. grazing intensity), and quantifying the consequences for microtopography, CO2 efflux and carbon fixation. Biocrust surface roughness peaked under intermediate crustivory pressure, implying that varying levels of crustivory may have opposing consequences for ecosystem processes such as carbon cycling, water infiltration, runoff generation and soil erosion. However, crustivory had a monotonic negative effect on biocrust carbon cycling. Biocrust CO2 efflux decreased with increasing crustivory, but recovered after several wetting events. Crustivory had a negative effect on biocrust C fixation, but only after the CO2 efflux recovered to pre-crustivory levels. Our findings suggest that macro-crustivores may play a pivotal role in regulating biocrust functioning, introducing a whole new line of trophic research that may transform our understanding of ecosystems dynamics in drylands.

Original languageEnglish
Article number117193
JournalGeoderma
Volume454
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s)

Keywords

  • Biocrust
  • Carbon cycle
  • Dryland
  • Hydrology
  • Surface roughness
  • Trophic interaction

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