Abstract Drivers of shrub primary production and associated landscape impacts of encroachment are well known in drylands but have not been thoroughly studied in mesic and coastal habitats. The native, nitrogen-fixing shrub,Morella cerifera,has expanded into coastal grassland along the US Atlantic coast due to warming temperatures, but impacts on ecosystem function are not well known. Annual net primary production (ANPP) ofMorella ceriferaand key environmental drivers were measured long-term (1990 – 2007) across a chronosequence of shrub age on a mid-Atlantic barrier island. Soil and groundwater nutrients were compared with un-encroached grassland soil to evaluate impacts of vegetation on nutrient dynamics. Shrub ANPP declined with age at the same rate among all thickets, but there was variability from year to year. When climate variables were included in models, shrub age, precipitation, and freshwater table depth were consistent predictors of ANPP. Water table depth decreased over time, reducing ANPP. This may be due to rising sea-level, as well as to feedbacks with shrub age and evapotranspiration. Soil N and C increased with shrub age and were higher than adjacent grassland sites; however, there was a significant loss of N and C to groundwater. Our results demonstrate that drivers influencing the encroachment of shrubs in this coastal system (i.e., warming temperature) are not as important in predicting shrub primary production. Rather, interactions between shrub age and hydrological properties impact ANPP, contributing to coastal carbon storage.
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This content will become publicly available on August 1, 2025
The Effect of Drying Boreal Lakes on Plants, Soils, and Microbial Communities in Lake Margin Habitats
Abstract Decadal scale lake drying in interior Alaska results in lake margin colonization by willow shrub and graminoid vegetation, but the effects of these changes on plant production, biodiversity, soil properties, and soil microbial communities are not well known. We studied changes in soil organic carbon (SOC) and nitrogen (N) storage, plant and microbial community composition, and soil microbial activities in drying and non‐drying lakes in the Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge. Historic changes in lake area were determined using Landsat imagery. Results showed that SOC storage in drying lake margins declined by 0.13 kg C m−2 yr−1over 30 years of exposure of lake sediments, with no significant change in soil N. Lake drying resulted in an increase in graminoid and shrub aboveground net primary production (ANPP, +3% yr−1) with little change in plant functional composition. Increases in ANPP were similar in magnitude (but opposite in sign) to losses in SOC over a 30‐year drying trend. Potential decomposition rates and soil enzyme activities were lower in drying lake margins compared to stable lake margins, possibly due to high salinities in drying lake margin soils. Microbial communities shifted in response to changing plant communities, although they still retained a legacy of the previous plant community. Understanding how changing lake hydrology impacts the ecology and biogeochemistry of lake margin terrestrial ecosystems is an underexamined phenomenon with large impacts to landscape processes.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2224776
- PAR ID:
- 10570351
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
- Volume:
- 129
- Issue:
- 8
- ISSN:
- 2169-8953
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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