Soil heterogeneity in Mojave Desert shrublands: Biotic and abiotic processes

Abstract

Geological and ecological processes play critical roles in the evolution of desert piedmonts. Feedback between fast cyclic biotic and slow cumulative pedogenic processes on arid alluvial fan systems results in a heterogeneous landscape of interspace and canopy microsites. Defining the spatial extent between these processes will allow a better connection to ecosystem service and climate change. We use a soil chronosequence in the Mojave Desert and high spatial resolution infiltrometer measurements along transects radiating from canopies of perennial shrubs to assess the extent of biotic and abiotic processes and the heterogeneity of soil properties in arid shrublands. Results showed higher saturated conductivity under vegetation regardless of surface age, but it was more conspicuous on older, developed soils. At proximal locations to the shrub, bulk density, soil structure grade, silt, and clay content significantly increased radially from the canopy, while sand and organic material decreased. Soil properties at distal locations 2–5 times the canopy radius had no significant spatial correlation. The extent of the biotic influence of the shrub was 1.34 ± 0.32 times the canopy radius. Hydraulic properties were weakly correlated in space, but 75% of the variance could be attributed to sand content, soil structure grade, mean‐particle diameter, and soil organic material, none of which are exclusively biotic or abiotic. The fast cyclic biotic processes occurring under vegetation are clearly overprinted on slow cumulative abiotic processes, resulting in the deterministic variability observed at the plant scale.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2012
Source ID
10.1029/2012wr011963

Entities

People

  • Eric V. Mcdonald
  • Jianting Zhu
  • Michael H. Young
  • Todd G. Caldwell

Organizations

  • Army Research Office
  • National Science Foundation

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Geotechnical Engineering.
  • Theoretical Analysis.
  • Wetland-Land-Environmental Management.

Technology Areas

  • Space