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Arthropods as the Engine of Nutrient Cycling in Arid Ecosystems

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Nutrient cycling in terrestrial ecosystems requires moisture. Deserts are characterized by low precipitation and extreme surface temperature that limit biological activity. Attempts to resolve how nutrients recycle despite these constraints were focused primarily on abiotic factors....

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Autores principales: Sagi, Nevo, Hawlena, Dror
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8397162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34442292
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12080726
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author Sagi, Nevo
Hawlena, Dror
author_facet Sagi, Nevo
Hawlena, Dror
author_sort Sagi, Nevo
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Nutrient cycling in terrestrial ecosystems requires moisture. Deserts are characterized by low precipitation and extreme surface temperature that limit biological activity. Attempts to resolve how nutrients recycle despite these constraints were focused primarily on abiotic factors. We suggest that macro-arthropods may play a disproportionally large role in resolving this conundrum. Macro-arthropods are prevalent in deserts and many of them are burrowing detritivores that can remain active during long dry periods. Desert arthropods process and transport plant litter nutrients belowground, where the conditions are favorable for decomposer activity. Consequently, arthropods may accelerate the recycling rate of plant litter nutrients to inorganic nutrients that become available for plant use. This generates a vertical nutrient recycling loop (VRL) that may also assist in explaining how desert plants receive nutrients when the shallow soil is dry. Macro-arthropods may also regulate the spatiotemporal distribution of nutrients by transporting them between patches and across ecosystems. Burrowing activity that alters the desert microtopography and reduces soil salinity may contribute further to creating hotspots of productivity and biological diversity in the otherwise poor desert environment. We conclude that macro-arthropods may play a key role in explaining how desert ecosystems function, and that better understanding of this unique role may assist combating desertification and restoring degraded arid lands. ABSTRACT: Nutrient dynamics in most terrestrial ecosystems are regulated by moisture-dependent processes. In drylands, nutrient dynamics are often weakly associated with annual precipitation, suggesting that other factors are involved. In recent years, the majority of research on this topic focused on abiotic factors. We provide an arthropod-centric framework that aims to refocus research attention back on the fundamental role that macro-arthropods may play in regulating dryland nutrient dynamics. Macro-arthropods are prevalent in drylands and include many detritivores and burrowing taxa that remain active during long dry periods. Macro-arthropods consume and process large quantities of plant detritus and transport these nutrients to the decomposer haven within their climatically buffered and nutritionally enriched burrows. Consequently, arthropods may accelerate mineralization rates and generate a vertical nutrient recycling loop (VRL) that may assist in explaining the dryland decomposition conundrum, and how desert plants receive their nutrients when the shallow soil is dry. The burrowing activity of arthropods and the transportation of subterranean soil to the surface may alter the desert microtopography and promote desalinization, reducing resource leakage and enhancing productivity and species diversity. We conclude that these fundamental roles and the arthropods’ contribution to nutrient transportation and nitrogen fixation makes them key regulators of nutrient dynamics in drylands.
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spelling pubmed-83971622021-08-28 Arthropods as the Engine of Nutrient Cycling in Arid Ecosystems Sagi, Nevo Hawlena, Dror Insects Review SIMPLE SUMMARY: Nutrient cycling in terrestrial ecosystems requires moisture. Deserts are characterized by low precipitation and extreme surface temperature that limit biological activity. Attempts to resolve how nutrients recycle despite these constraints were focused primarily on abiotic factors. We suggest that macro-arthropods may play a disproportionally large role in resolving this conundrum. Macro-arthropods are prevalent in deserts and many of them are burrowing detritivores that can remain active during long dry periods. Desert arthropods process and transport plant litter nutrients belowground, where the conditions are favorable for decomposer activity. Consequently, arthropods may accelerate the recycling rate of plant litter nutrients to inorganic nutrients that become available for plant use. This generates a vertical nutrient recycling loop (VRL) that may also assist in explaining how desert plants receive nutrients when the shallow soil is dry. Macro-arthropods may also regulate the spatiotemporal distribution of nutrients by transporting them between patches and across ecosystems. Burrowing activity that alters the desert microtopography and reduces soil salinity may contribute further to creating hotspots of productivity and biological diversity in the otherwise poor desert environment. We conclude that macro-arthropods may play a key role in explaining how desert ecosystems function, and that better understanding of this unique role may assist combating desertification and restoring degraded arid lands. ABSTRACT: Nutrient dynamics in most terrestrial ecosystems are regulated by moisture-dependent processes. In drylands, nutrient dynamics are often weakly associated with annual precipitation, suggesting that other factors are involved. In recent years, the majority of research on this topic focused on abiotic factors. We provide an arthropod-centric framework that aims to refocus research attention back on the fundamental role that macro-arthropods may play in regulating dryland nutrient dynamics. Macro-arthropods are prevalent in drylands and include many detritivores and burrowing taxa that remain active during long dry periods. Macro-arthropods consume and process large quantities of plant detritus and transport these nutrients to the decomposer haven within their climatically buffered and nutritionally enriched burrows. Consequently, arthropods may accelerate mineralization rates and generate a vertical nutrient recycling loop (VRL) that may assist in explaining the dryland decomposition conundrum, and how desert plants receive their nutrients when the shallow soil is dry. The burrowing activity of arthropods and the transportation of subterranean soil to the surface may alter the desert microtopography and promote desalinization, reducing resource leakage and enhancing productivity and species diversity. We conclude that these fundamental roles and the arthropods’ contribution to nutrient transportation and nitrogen fixation makes them key regulators of nutrient dynamics in drylands. MDPI 2021-08-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8397162/ /pubmed/34442292 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12080726 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Sagi, Nevo
Hawlena, Dror
Arthropods as the Engine of Nutrient Cycling in Arid Ecosystems
title Arthropods as the Engine of Nutrient Cycling in Arid Ecosystems
title_full Arthropods as the Engine of Nutrient Cycling in Arid Ecosystems
title_fullStr Arthropods as the Engine of Nutrient Cycling in Arid Ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Arthropods as the Engine of Nutrient Cycling in Arid Ecosystems
title_short Arthropods as the Engine of Nutrient Cycling in Arid Ecosystems
title_sort arthropods as the engine of nutrient cycling in arid ecosystems
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8397162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34442292
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12080726
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