Search About RLL About Mattick About Supplement Add to Supplement PDF file providers Help

Full record view

Magalhães, C./ M. I. Stevens/ S. C. Cary/ B. A. Ball/ B. C. Storey/ D. H. Wall/ R. Türk/ U. Ruprecht 2012: At limits of life: multidisciplinary insights reveal environmental constraints on biotic diversity in continental antarctica. - PLoS ONE 7(9): e44578. [RLL List # 231 / Rec.# 34654]
Keywords: alga/ Antarctica/ article/ bacterium/ biodiversity/ biota/ carbon nitrogen ratio/ conductance/ cyanobacterium/ ecosystem/ environment/ geochemistry/ geographic elevation/ geology/ glaciation/ invertebrate/ lichen (organism)/ nonhuman/ organism community/ soil property/ Antarctic Regions/ Biodiversity/ Ecosystem/ Soil
Abstract: Multitrophic communities that maintain the functionality of the extreme Antarctic terrestrial ecosystems, while the simplest of any natural community, are still challenging our knowledge about the limits to life on earth. In this study, we describe and interpret the linkage between the diversity of different trophic level communities to the geological morphology and soil geochemistry in the remote Transantarctic Mountains (Darwin Mountains, 80°S). We examined the distribution and diversity of biota (bacteria, cyanobacteria, lichens, algae, invertebrates) with respect to elevation, age of glacial drift sheets, and soil physicochemistry. Results showed an abiotic spatial gradient with respect to the diversity of the organisms across different trophic levels. More complex communities, in terms of trophic level diversity, were related to the weakly developed younger drifts (Hatherton and Britannia) with higher soil C/N ratio and lower total soluble salts content (thus lower conductivity). Our results indicate that an increase of ion concentration from younger to older drift regions drives a succession of complex to more simple communities, in terms of number of trophic levels and diversity within each group of organisms analysed. This study revealed that integrating diversity across multi-trophic levels of biotic communities with abiotic spatial heterogeneity and geological history is fundamental to understand environmental constraints influencing biological distribution in Antarctic soil ecosystems. © 2012 Magalhães et al.

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044578

[Email correction]


Upload PDF file to the RLL web site

If you have a PDF file of this RLL/Mattic record, and there are no copyright problems involved, you may upload the file to the RLL/Mattick site. The PDF file will be automatically linked to the paper, and available for download by everyone. Only one PDF file can be linked to a paper, any previous link will be lost.

PDF file::
NB! Legal characters: a-z, A-Z, 0-9, hyphen, underscore, dot (i.e. no diacritics, ampersand, space, etc.).

  


Upload URL to PDF file or web site

Alternatively, you can link this RLL/Mattick record to a PDF file or web page placed somewhere else on the web. Again, only a single link can exist for each record; any previous link will be lost.

Copy and paste the URL you wish to link to this record: