Rapid soil and vegetation changes at regional scale in continental Antarctica

被引:22
作者
Cannone, N. [1 ]
Guglielmin, M. [2 ]
Malfasi, F. [1 ]
Hubberten, H. W. [3 ]
Wagner, D. [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Insubria, Dept Sci & High Technol, Via Valleggio 11, I-22100 Como, CO, Italy
[2] Univ Insubria, Dept Theoret & Appl Sci, Via JH Dunant 3, I-21100 Varese, VA, Italy
[3] Alfred Wegener Inst, Helmholtz Ctr Polar & Marine Res, D-14473 Potsdam, Germany
[4] GFZ German Res Ctr Geosci, Sect Geomicrobiol, D-14473 Potsdam, Germany
[5] Univ Potsdam, Inst Earth & Environm Sci, Karl Liebknecht Str 24-25, D-14476 Potsdam, Germany
关键词
Soil chemistry; Alkalinization; Vegetation changes; Manipulation experiment; SOUTHERN VICTORIA LAND; ROSS SEA REGION; LATITUDINAL GRADIENT; TERRESTRIAL VEGETATION; COMMUNITY STRUCTURE; LICHEN VEGETATION; CLIMATE-CHANGE; POLAR DESERT; KAR PLATEAU; WILKES-LAND;
D O I
10.1016/j.geoderma.2021.115017
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Antarctica is the last pristine environment on Earth, its biota being adapted to the harsh and extreme polar climate. Until now, soil formation and vegetation development in continental Antarctica were considered very slow due to the extreme conditions of this polar desert. Since the austral summer 2002/2003, a long-term monitoring network of the terrestrial ecosystems (soils, vegetation, active layer thickness) has been established at Victoria Land (VL) across a > 500 km latitudinal gradient of coastal sites (73 degrees -77 degrees S). In only one decade large ecosystem changes were detected. Climate was characterized by a significant increase of thawing degree days in northern VL and of autumn air temperature. No extreme climatic events (such as hot spells) where detected in the study period. Soil chemistry suffered large quantitative changes, clearly indicating rapid pedogenetic processes. In most soils the upper layers exhibited a strong alkalinization (pH increases up to 3 units) and increases in conductivity, anions and cations (in particular of SO4 and Na). The largest changes were observed in soils with low vegetation cover. Statistically significant differences in soil chemistry were detected between soils with high and low vegetation cover, the former showing lower pH, conductivity, Na and Cl. Most plots exhibited changes of total cover, species richness and floristic composition, with vegetation expansion in soils with low vegetation cover and the largest increase recorded at Apostrophe Island (northern VL). Principal Component Analysis (PCA) identified the main trend of vegetation change, with a shift from lower to higher cover and a secondary trend of change associated with a gradient of water availability, consistent with an increase in water instead of snow. Redundancy analysis (RDA) identified the trend of change in soil chemistry with increases in pH, conductivity, anions and cations associated with the concomitant decrease in C, N, NO3, PO4. The RDA confirmed that soil changes were associated with a gradient of vegetation change (from low to high cover) as well as of water availability, as already indirectly outlined by the PCA. Field manipulation experiments carried out at five locations of the network between 73 degrees S and 77 degrees S, simulating increases of precipitation from snow or water additions didn't induce changes in soil pH, indicating that pulse events of snow accumulation or melting could not trigger persistent soil pH changes. These data allow hypothesize the occurrence of a main ecosystem change occurring at regional scale at Victoria Land. The slight air warming and its consequences on soil chemistry and vegetation, further highlight the sensitivity of the fragile Antarctic ecosystems to the consequences of even small changes in climate.
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页数:16
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