Early successional changes in biological soil crust community assembly and nutrient capture in mining impacted landscapes

Biological soil crusts (BSCs) are communities of bryophytes, lichens, bacteria, and fungi and are the primary colonizing communities in early successional landscapes. Investigating the role of BSCs in early ecosystem development have demonstrated that they often improve the physical and chemical con...

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Main Authors: Cowden, Phaedra, Hanner, Robert, Kuzmina, Maria, Conway, Alix, Collis, Brianna, Ivanova, Natalia, Stewart, Katherine
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Borealis
Subjects:
16S
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/H5SKG4
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spelling ftborealisdata:doi:10.5683/SP3/H5SKG4 2023-05-15T15:16:15+02:00 Early successional changes in biological soil crust community assembly and nutrient capture in mining impacted landscapes Cowden, Phaedra Hanner, Robert Kuzmina, Maria Conway, Alix Collis, Brianna Ivanova, Natalia Stewart, Katherine Cowden, Phaedra https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/H5SKG4 English eng Borealis https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/H5SKG4 Earth and Environmental Sciences Biological soil crust community assembly 16S ITS2 bryophytes Genetic sequence data (FASTQ files) ftborealisdata https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/H5SKG4 2022-12-01T13:21:15Z Biological soil crusts (BSCs) are communities of bryophytes, lichens, bacteria, and fungi and are the primary colonizing communities in early successional landscapes. Investigating the role of BSCs in early ecosystem development have demonstrated that they often improve the physical and chemical conditions while also promoting soil microbial communities in early developing ecosystems. Although BSCs are considered ecosystem engineers in many early successional environments, the links between BSC functional processes and their developmental stage are unclear, especially in landscapes recovering from anthropogenic disturbances. In this study we examined natural BSC development over a 30-year chronosequence on two mining impacted landscapes in both boreal and arctic regions of Canada. The macro (bryophyte and lichen) and micro (bacteria and fungi)-phyla communities were identified through a combination of Ion torrent (16S) and Illumina MiSeq (ITS2) sequencing. We found similar ubiquitous ruderal bryophytes and bacteria species common at both mine sites, but significant differences in lichen and fungal community structure between the two study locations. In addition, community assembly of BSC macro (bryophytes and lichens) and micro (bacteria and fungi)-phyla changed over the first 30 years of recovery at both mine sites, however, these changes were unique to each mine site. We observed nutrient accumulation in the crust layer but did not find clear trends in available nutrients or gas flux over time. Instead, changes in our functional measurements were associated with colonization by specific BSC species. Further, the bacterial community at both mines seemed to be responding to changes in the bryophyte communities as they developed over time. This suggests that the establishment of bryophyte communities in early succession may be driving micro-phyla BSC community composition. A holistic view of BSCs as they develop over time in relation to their functional abilities needs further investigation. This knowledge will ... Other/Unknown Material Arctic Borealis Arctic Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Borealis
op_collection_id ftborealisdata
language English
topic Earth and Environmental Sciences
Biological soil crust
community assembly
16S
ITS2
bryophytes
spellingShingle Earth and Environmental Sciences
Biological soil crust
community assembly
16S
ITS2
bryophytes
Cowden, Phaedra
Hanner, Robert
Kuzmina, Maria
Conway, Alix
Collis, Brianna
Ivanova, Natalia
Stewart, Katherine
Early successional changes in biological soil crust community assembly and nutrient capture in mining impacted landscapes
topic_facet Earth and Environmental Sciences
Biological soil crust
community assembly
16S
ITS2
bryophytes
description Biological soil crusts (BSCs) are communities of bryophytes, lichens, bacteria, and fungi and are the primary colonizing communities in early successional landscapes. Investigating the role of BSCs in early ecosystem development have demonstrated that they often improve the physical and chemical conditions while also promoting soil microbial communities in early developing ecosystems. Although BSCs are considered ecosystem engineers in many early successional environments, the links between BSC functional processes and their developmental stage are unclear, especially in landscapes recovering from anthropogenic disturbances. In this study we examined natural BSC development over a 30-year chronosequence on two mining impacted landscapes in both boreal and arctic regions of Canada. The macro (bryophyte and lichen) and micro (bacteria and fungi)-phyla communities were identified through a combination of Ion torrent (16S) and Illumina MiSeq (ITS2) sequencing. We found similar ubiquitous ruderal bryophytes and bacteria species common at both mine sites, but significant differences in lichen and fungal community structure between the two study locations. In addition, community assembly of BSC macro (bryophytes and lichens) and micro (bacteria and fungi)-phyla changed over the first 30 years of recovery at both mine sites, however, these changes were unique to each mine site. We observed nutrient accumulation in the crust layer but did not find clear trends in available nutrients or gas flux over time. Instead, changes in our functional measurements were associated with colonization by specific BSC species. Further, the bacterial community at both mines seemed to be responding to changes in the bryophyte communities as they developed over time. This suggests that the establishment of bryophyte communities in early succession may be driving micro-phyla BSC community composition. A holistic view of BSCs as they develop over time in relation to their functional abilities needs further investigation. This knowledge will ...
author2 Cowden, Phaedra
format Other/Unknown Material
author Cowden, Phaedra
Hanner, Robert
Kuzmina, Maria
Conway, Alix
Collis, Brianna
Ivanova, Natalia
Stewart, Katherine
author_facet Cowden, Phaedra
Hanner, Robert
Kuzmina, Maria
Conway, Alix
Collis, Brianna
Ivanova, Natalia
Stewart, Katherine
author_sort Cowden, Phaedra
title Early successional changes in biological soil crust community assembly and nutrient capture in mining impacted landscapes
title_short Early successional changes in biological soil crust community assembly and nutrient capture in mining impacted landscapes
title_full Early successional changes in biological soil crust community assembly and nutrient capture in mining impacted landscapes
title_fullStr Early successional changes in biological soil crust community assembly and nutrient capture in mining impacted landscapes
title_full_unstemmed Early successional changes in biological soil crust community assembly and nutrient capture in mining impacted landscapes
title_sort early successional changes in biological soil crust community assembly and nutrient capture in mining impacted landscapes
publisher Borealis
url https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/H5SKG4
geographic Arctic
Canada
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/H5SKG4
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/H5SKG4
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