Abstract Quantifying ecosystem resilience to disturbance is important for understanding the effects of disturbances on ecosystems, especially in an era of rapid global change. However, there are few studies that have used standardized experimental disturbances to compare resilience patterns across abiotic gradients in real‐world ecosystems. Theoretical studies have suggested that increased return times are associated with increasing variance during recovery from disturbance. However, this notion has rarely been explicitly tested in field, in part due to the challenges involved in obtaining long‐term experimental data. In this study, we examined resilience to disturbance of 12 coastal marsh sites (five low‐salinity and seven polyhaline [=salt] marshes) along a salinity gradient in Georgia, USA. We found that recovery times after experimental disturbance ranged from 7 to >127 months, and differed among response variables (vegetation height, cover and composition). Recovery rates decreased along the stress gradient of increasing salinity, presumably due to stress reducing plant vigor, but only when low‐salinity and polyhaline sites were analyzed separately, indicating a strong role for traits of dominant plant species. The coefficient of variation of vegetation cover and height in control plots did not vary with salinity. In disturbed plots, however, the coefficient of variation (CV) was consistently elevated during the recovery period and increased with salinity. Moreover, higher CV values during recovery were correlated with slower recovery rates. Our results deepen our understanding of resilience to disturbance in natural ecosystems, and point to novel ways that variance can be used either to infer recent disturbance, or, if measured in areas with a known disturbance history, to predict recovery patterns.
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Bacterial community response to novel and repeated disturbances
Abstract Disturbance response and recovery are increasingly important in microbial ecology, as microbes may recover from disturbances differently than macro communities. Past disturbances can alter microbial community structure and their response to subsequent disturbance events, but it remains unclear if the same recovery patterns persist after long‐term exposure to stress. Here, we compare bacterial community composition in a community that experienced 2 years of monthly salinity addition disturbances with a community that has not experienced salinity additions. We then track the response and recovery to an additional salinity addition based on past disturbance exposure. We tested the following hypotheses: first, communities with a repeated disturbance history will have a different community composition than communities without a disturbance history; second, communities exposed to repeated disturbances will undergo a different recovery trajectory than communities experiencing a novel disturbance. We find that repeated disturbances alter community composition and affect community response and recovery to a subsequent disturbance after 2 years, primarily through increased resistance. This work enhances our understanding of microbial temporal dynamics and suggests that novel disturbances may pose a threat to microbial community structure and function.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2141922
- PAR ID:
- 10589082
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Environmental Microbiology Reports
- Volume:
- 16
- Issue:
- 5
- ISSN:
- 1758-2229
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- e70022
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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