scholarly journals Microbial Communities in Boreal Peatlands: Responses to Climate Change and Atmospheric Nitrogen and Sulfur Depositions

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Magalí Martí Generó
2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Jenssen ◽  
Stefan Nickel ◽  
Winfried Schröder

Abstract Background Atmospheric deposition of nitrogen and climate change can have impacts on ecological structures and functions, and thus on the integrity of ecosystems and their services. Operationalization of ecosystem integrity is still an important desideratum. Results A methodology for classifying the ecosystem integrity of forests in Germany under the influence of climate change and atmospheric nitrogen deposition is presented. The methodology was based on 14 indicators for six ecosystem functions: habitat function, net primary function, carbon sequestration, nutrient and water flux, resilience. It allows assessments of ecosystem integrity changes by comparing current or prospective ecosystem states with ecosystem-type-specific reference states as described by quantitative indicators for 61 forest ecosystem types based on data before 1990. Conclusion The method developed enables site-specific classifications of ecosystem integrity as well as classifications with complete coverage and determinations of temporal trends as shown using examples from the Thuringian Forest and the “Kellerwald-Edersee” National Park (Germany).


2021 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael Vicuña ◽  
Bernardo González

Abstract Background In this article we would like to touch on the key role played by the microbiota in the maintenance of a sustainable environment in the entire planet. For obvious reasons, this article does not intend to review thoroughly this extremely complex topic, but rather to focus on the main threats that this natural scenario is presently facing. Methods Recent literature survey. Results Despite the relevance of microorganisms have in our planet, the effects of climate change on microbial communities have been scarcely and not systematically addressed in literature. Although the role of microorganisms in emissions of greenhouse gases has received some attention, there are several microbial processes that are affected by climate change with consequences that are presently under assessment. Among them, host-pathogen interactions, the microbiome of built environment, or relations among plants and beneficial microbes. Conclusions Further research is required to advance in knowledge of the effect of climate change on microbial communities. One of the main targets should be a complete evaluation of the global microbial functional diversity and the design of new strategies to cope with limitations in methods to grow microorganisms in the laboratory. These efforts should contribute to raise a general public awareness on the major role played by the microbiota on the various Earth ecosystems.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Bourgeau-Chavez ◽  
Jeremy Graham ◽  
Andrew Poley ◽  
Dorthea Leisman ◽  
Michael Battaglia

<p>Eighty percent of global peatlands are distributed across the boreal and subarctic regions, storing an estimated 30% of earth’s soil organic carbon (1,016 to 1,105 Gt C) despite representing only about 3% of the global land surface. The accumulation of C in peatlands generally depends on hydrologic conditions that maintain saturated soils and impede rates of decomposition. Boreal Peatlands have provided rich reservoirs of stored C for millennia. However, with climate change, warming and drying patterns across the boreal and arctic are resulting in dramatic changes in ecosystems and putting these systems at risk of changing from a C sink to a source.  Recent changes in climate including earlier springs, longer summers and changes in moisture patterns across the landscape, are affecting wildfire regimes of the boreal region including intensity, severity and frequency of wildfires. This in turn has potential to cause shifts in successional trajectories.  Understanding how these changes in climate are affecting peatlands and their vulnerability to wildfire has been a focus of study of the research team since 2009.  Soil moisture is one variable which can provide information to understand wildfire behavior including the depth of peat consumption in these wildfires but it also has a direct effect on post-fire successional trajectories. Further it is needed to understand methane emissions from peatlands.  To develop the soil moisture retrieval algorithms, we studied a range of boreal peatland sites (bogs and fens) stratified across geographic regions from 2012-2014.  We developed soil moisture retrieval algorithms from polarimetric C-band (5.7 cm wavelength) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data.  Peatlands have low enough aboveground biomass (<3.0 kg/m<sup>2</sup>) to allow this shorter wavelength SAR to penetrate the canopy to reach the ground surface.  Data from over 60, 4 ha sites were collected over 3 seasons from Alaska and Michigan USA and Alberta Canada.  Both multi-linear regressions and general additive models (GAM) were developed.  Using both polarimetric SAR parameters that are sensitive to vegetation structure and parameters most sensitive to surface soil moisture in the models provided the best results.  GAM models were tested in an independent study area, Northwest Territories (NWT), Canada.  The sites of NWT were sampled in 2016-2019 coincident to Radarsat-2 polarimetric image collections.  The high accuracy results will be presented as well as methods developed to use multidate C-band data from Sentinel-1 to classify soil drainage (well drained to poorly drained) in recently burned peatlands.  These products are being used in a fire effects and emissions model, CanFIRE, as we parameterize it for peatlands; as well as the Functionally-Assembled Terrestrial Ecosystem Simulator <strong>(</strong>FATES) to understand the effects of wildfire and hydrology on peatland ecosystems.  Characterization and quantification of boreal peatlands in global C cycling is critical for proper accounting given that peatlands play a significant role in sequestering and releasing large amounts of C. The ability to retrieve soil moisture from C-band SAR, therefore, provides a means to monitor a key variable in scaling C flux estimates as well as understanding the vulnerability and resiliency of boreal peatlands to climate change.</p><p> </p>


2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (11) ◽  
pp. 3351-3365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cassandre Gaudnik ◽  
Emmanuel Corcket ◽  
Bernard Clément ◽  
Chloé E. L. Delmas ◽  
Sandrine Gombert-Courvoisier ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lindsey K. Deignan ◽  
Diane McDougald

AbstractAs corals continue to decline globally, particularly due to climate change, it is vital to understand the extent to which their microbiome may confer an adaptive resilience against environmental stress. Corals that survive on the urban reefs of Singapore are ideal candidates to study the association of scleractinians with their microbiome, which in turn can inform reef conservation and management. In this study, we monitored differences in the microbiome of Pocillopora acuta colonies reciprocally transplanted between two reefs, Raffles and Kusu, within the Port of Singapore, where corals face intense anthropogenic impacts. Pocillopora acuta had previously been shown to host distinct microbial communities between these two reefs. Amplicon sequencing (16S rRNA) was used to assess the coral microbiomes at 1, 2, 4, and 10 days post-transplantation. Coral microbiomes responded rapidly to transplantation, becoming similar to those of the local corals at the destination reef within one day at Raffles and within two days at Kusu. Elevated nitrate concentrations were detected at Raffles for the duration of the study, potentially influencing the microbiome’s response to transplantation. The persistence of corals within the port of Singapore highlights the ability of corals to adapt to stressful environments. Further, coral resilience appears to coincide with a dynamic microbiome which can undergo shifts in composition without succumbing to dysbiosis.


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