Biogeochemical stoichiometry of Antarctic Dry Valley ecosystems

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Biogeochemical stoichiometry of Antarctic Dry Valley ecosystems

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Title
Biogeochemical stoichiometry of Antarctic Dry Valley ecosystems
Author
Barrett, John E.; Virginia, Ross A.; Lyons, W. Berry; McKnight, Diane M.; Priscu, John Charles; Doran, Peter T.; Fountain, Andrew G.; Wall, Diana H.; Moorhead, D. L.
Sponsor
This paper is a contribution to the National Science Foundation sponsored McMurdo LTER Program (OPP 9810219 and 0096250).
Abstract
Among aquatic and terrestrial landscapes of the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica, ecosystem stoichiometry ranges from values near the Redfield ratios for C:N:P to nutrient concentrations in proportions far above or below ratios necessary to support balanced microbial growth. This polar desert provides an opportunity to evaluate stoichiometric approaches to understand nutrient cycling in an ecosystem where biological diversity and activity are low, and controls over the movement and mass balances of nutrients operate over 10–10⁶ years. The simple organisms (microbial and metazoan) comprising dry valley foodwebs adhere to strict biochemical requirements in the composition of their biomass, and when activated by availability of liquid water, they influence the chemical composition of their environment according to these ratios. Nitrogen and phosphorus varied significantly in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems occurring on landscape surfaces across a wide range of exposure ages, indicating strong influences of landscape development and geochemistry on nutrient availability. Biota control the elemental ratio of stream waters, while geochemical stoichiometry (e.g., weathering, atmospheric deposition) evidently limits the distribution of soil invertebrates. We present a conceptual model describing transformations across dry valley landscapes facilitated by exchanges of liquid water and biotic processing of dissolved nutrients. We conclude that contemporary ecosystem stoichiometry of Antarctic Dry Valley soils, glaciers, streams, and lakes results from a combination of extant biological processes superimposed on a legacy of landscape processes and previous climates.
Description
Copyright 2007 American Geophysical Union.
Permanent Link
http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/7391
LCSH Subjects
Desert ecology -- Antarctica -- McMurdo Dry Valleys
Biogeochemistry -- Cold regions
Nutrient cycles -- Antarctica --McMurdo Dry Valleys
Copyright
All data and content associated with the Portland State University Digital Repository are protected by United States copyright law. Duplication or sale of all or part of any of the data or images is not permitted without consent of the copyright holder. Use of the content is strictly for non-commercial, educational use.
Date
2007-02-07
Physical Description
12 pages
Notes
System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader; Mode of access: Internet

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