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Latitudinal Gradient Project: Soil Biodiversity and
Response to Climate Change - Regional comparison
of Cape Hallet and Taylor Valley, Antarctic

Soil ecosystems along the Antarctic Victoria Land coast
from the McMurdo (MCM) Dry Valleys in the south
(78-76 S) to Cape Hallett (72S) in the north occur across
broad scale gradients of biodiversity, climate, and soil
resource legacies (e.g. organic matter, nutrients, salts)
from previous climates. The range of conditions encountered
across this region can be used to test specific hypotheses
derived from a soil biodiversity and habitat model developed
from the findings of the MCM
Dry Valleys Long-term Ecological Research Program (LTER).
This "habitat suitability" model describes the
distribution, abundance and diversity of soil biota based
upon a combination of legacy and contemporary soil and climate
properties.
This current project will extend the habitat suitability
model developed in the McMurdo Dry Valleys to the greater
Victoria Land region at Cape Hallett. Insights into the relationship
between biodiversity (microbes, invertebrates) and ecosystem
functioning (soil respiration and nutrient cycling) may be
especially important in the Victoria Land region since it
encompasses a range of ecosystems, including those with organic
matter near minimum detection limits and no invertebrates,
to those with very high organic matter deposits and complex
food webs (2-3 trophic groups comprised of >4 invertebrate
taxa). A two-year study of field and laboratory research
will address how soil food webs and ecosystem processes are
affected by changes in climate, legacy and contemporary soil
processes.

This research began with the regionalization of results
and insights from the McMurdo LTER study and determine whether
the changes in biodiversity along the range of soil habitats
and landscape gradients in Taylor Valley, occur similarly
across gradients in a richer, more complex habitats (e.g.
Cape Hallett). This study involves international
collaborations and will further multi-national research
in the Antarctic. There is a clear and immediate need to
understand how soil biodiversity and ecosystem functioning
are related in all ecosystems and to determine the factors
influencing the distribution of soil biodiversity across
the Antarctic landscape. The motivation for the research
proposed here underscores the value of soils and their biota
in providing ecosystem services important to society (e.g.,
soil fertility). This is a difficult challenge as the taxonomic
complexity of soil food webs elsewhere limits our ability
to draw inferences about the functional significance of biodiversity
and the responses of soil communities to varying soil conditions
and climate. This research will make a significant contribution
to testing biodiversity theory in all soils, because extension
of and testing this conceptual model of soil biodiversity
based on the simplest soil communities on earth will contribute
to knowledge of complex temperate ecosystems. These linked
studies of microbial and invertebrate diversity in relation
to soil organic matter, moisture, and temperature change
at Taylor Valley and Cape Hallett will provide one of the
most complete quantitative assessments of soil diversity
to date. |
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