4.7 Article

yy Air temperature more than drought duration affects litter decomposition under flow intermittency

期刊

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
卷 829, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.154666

关键词

Aquatic hyphomycetes; Hydrological contraction; Intermittency; Streams

资金

  1. FCT, within the POCH - Human Capital Operating Program [SFRH/BD/119133/2016, COVID/BD/151791/2021]
  2. European Social Fund
  3. MCTES national funds
  4. FCT/MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC)
  5. CCDR [Centro 2020, Centro-01-0145-FEDER-000007]
  6. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [COVID/BD/151791/2021, SFRH/BD/119133/2016] Funding Source: FCT

向作者/读者索取更多资源

A study found that temperature plays an important role in microbial-mediated leaf degradation in streams experiencing intermittency. During short dry periods, aquatic fungal communities invest in energetically-expensive physiological responses to desiccation, while longer drought periods result in lower fungal diversity and negative effects on fungal growth and reproductive capacity. Native riparian vegetation plays a critical role in protecting freshwater ecosystems from intensified drought periods in intermittently flowing streams.
Stream intermittency - periodic sequences of water flow cessation and resumption - occurs throughout the year, across seasons. Even though temperature is a known regulator of litter decomposition in both terrestrial and aquatic environments, comparative experiments on drought durations at distinct temperatures on microbial-mediated decomposition in streams experiencing intermittency are still lacking. Here, three drought temperatures (5,15 and 25 degrees C) and two durations (short: 2.5 weeks; long: 5 weeks) were applied in a microcosm study to oak leaf discs colonized in a reference stream; mass loss and associated microbial parameters (fungal biomass, microbial activity, and sporulation rates) were evaluated following re-submersion for 2 weeks. Higher mass loss was found at 15 degrees C than 25 degrees C. A prolongation of the drought exposure period had no effect on mass loss, suggesting an early (<= 2.5 weeks) inhibitor effect of drought on microbial-mediated leaf degradation. Fungal biomass was highest at 25 degrees C following a short drought, and decreased with a longer drought period at both 15 degrees C and 25 degrees C. Microbial activity was not affected by either drought duration or temperature. Sporulation rates and fungal diversity were significantly reduced by the longer drought period; in the short treatment, maximum values were found at 15 degrees C. In contrast to longer droughts, aquatic fungal communities during short dry periods seem to invest in energetically-expensive physiological responses to desiccation (e.g., ergosterol production) promoting biomass accrual at the expense of mass loss and reproductive output. Under more severe desiccation (higher duration and temperature), the lower diversity of fungal communities seem to result in negative legacy effects for fungal growth and reproductive capacity after flow resumption. These results suggest that native riparian vegetation, through its ability to regulate temperature in streams, may be critical in protecting freshwaters from intensified severity of drought periods in streams experiencing intermittency.

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