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Rainfall regulates decomposition of buried cellulose in the Namib Desert
Authors:KM Jacobson  PJ Jacobson
Institution:Desert Research Foundation of Namibia, PO Box 1592, Swakopmund, Namibia
Abstract:Because of the aridity of the Namib Sand Sea, it has long been assumed that decomposition of buried plant material was largely independent of rainfall. Losses were attributed to consumption by detritivores that forage year-round. Moisture-limited micro-organisms were reported to occur in low densities in Namib sands, supporting the assumption that rainfall was insignificant in regulating decomposition. Observations of abundant macrofungal fruiting from buried plant material and herbivore dung, following a 12 mm rain, suggested the importance of rain-induced decomposition had been underestimated. We used cellulose substrates to compare material loss during dry periods and following differing amounts of rain. Strips of cotton cloth and filter paper, buried at 10 cm depths at five disjunct locations, were sequentially removed over 10 months. A period of at least 170 days elapsed before rains, ranging from 4–46 mm, fell at all locations. Material loss during the dry period averaged 8·2% (range 0–16·7%), and was attributed to macrodetritivore consumption. In marked contrast, an average of 84·1% of the material (range 64·7–97·2%) was lost following rains greater than 9 mm. Wet substrates were heavily colonized by fungi, and termites and tenebrionid beetle larvae were observed feeding on fungus-colonized substrates. Stepwise regression analysis revealed that rainfall, rather than duration of burial, was the primary factor determining substrate loss in the Namib Sand Sea. Although rain events are infrequent and ensuing periods of moist soil are brief, substrate loss following rains is highly significant relative to that occurring in the absence of rain. In contrast to more mesic deserts, rainfall is an important trigger of decomposition in the Namib Sand Sea where soils are too dry to support significant decomposition, except when episodically moistened by rain.
Keywords:decomposition  cellulose  rainfall  soil moisture  Namib Desert
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