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Scientists Reveal Responses of Different Biocrusts to Warming and Increased Drought
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In arid desert regions, a large proportion of the ground surface is covered by specialized organisms such as mosses and lichens that form biocrusts, which are important for the cycling of key nutrients in desert ecosystems. 

However, the long-term effects of warming and drought on these key biotic components of desert ecosystems remain poorly understood. Therefore, it is necessary to explore the response and adaptation mechanism of desert system to climate change. 

Recently, a research team led by Prof. LI Xinrong from Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources (NIEER) of Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) evaluated how both lichens and mosses in biocrusts communities responded to 0.5 and 1.5 increases in temperature coupled with 5% and 8% reductions in total annual precipitation. 

By using a manipulative experiment conducted for 12 years in the Tengger Desert of northwestern China, they used two groups of open-top chambers to simulate climate change conditions that were predicted to occur in this study region, and evaluated surface soil carbon uptake by biocrusts. 

Study results indicated that twelve years of warming coupled with increased drought resulted in a significant decrease in the cover and biomass of mosses but did not change the cover or biomass of lichens. 

This study suggests that coupled warming and drought conditions could increase the dominance of lichens in biocrust communities to partly maintain the multifunctionality of biocrusts in this desert ecosystem. 

This study has been published on Agricultural and Forest Meteorology recently titled with divergent responses of moss- and lichen-dominated biocrusts to warming and increased drought in arid desert regions. 

  

Contact: 

LI Xinrong 

E-mail: lxingrong@lzb.ac.cn  

Shapotou Desert Research and Experiment Station, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou, China. 

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