| Literature DB >> 26345615 |
Theresa A McHugh1,2, Ember M Morrissey2, Sasha C Reed1, Bruce A Hungate2,3, Egbert Schwartz2,3.
Abstract
Water drives the functioning of Earth's arid and semiarid lands. Drylands can obtain water from sources other than precipitation, yet little is known about how non-rainfall water inputs influence dryland communities and their activity. In particular, water vapor adsorption--movement of atmospheric water vapor into soil when soil air is drier than the overlying air--likely occurs often in drylands, yet its effects on ecosystem processes are not known. By adding (18)O-enriched water vapor to the atmosphere of a closed system, we documented the conversion of water vapor to soil liquid water across a temperature range typical of arid ecosystems. This phenomenon rapidly increased soil moisture and stimulated microbial carbon (C) cycling, and the flux of water vapor to soil had a stronger impact than temperature on microbial activity. In a semiarid grassland, we also observed that non-rainfall water inputs stimulated microbial activity and C cycling. Together these data suggest that, during rain-free periods, atmospheric moisture in drylands may significantly contribute to variation in soil water content, thereby influencing ecosystem processes. The simple physical process of adsorption of water vapor to soil particles, forming liquid water, represents an overlooked but potentially important contributor to C cycling in drylands.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26345615 PMCID: PMC4561883 DOI: 10.1038/srep13767
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Atmospheric relative humidity (a) soil gravimetric moisture content (b) and soil water 18O atom percent excess (c) in response to atmospheric water vapor addition. Error bars are standard error for means (n = 3). Significant differences as determined by one-way ANOVA and Tukey’s post-hoc test are indicated using lowercase letters (α = 0.05).
Figure 2Soil CO2 efflux rates across temperature regimes for control and water vapor adsorption treatment.
Error bars are standard error for means (n = 5). The effect of water vapor adsorption (percent change relative to control) is shown with white circles.
Figure 3Path diagram displaying the role of soil temperature and soil moisture in regulating soil CO2 efflux rates under a reduced model.
Arrows represent unidirectional causal relationships. The amount of variation that can be explained by the model is indicated by the R2 values associated with each response variable. Standardized path coefficients (r) associated with each arrow reflect the strength of each relationship (p < 0.001 in both cases). The full model also included the direct assessment of temperature effects on CO2 efflux rates, but since that relationship was not statistically significant, no arrow is shown.