Chelsey samples the soil crust beneath a creosote. |
Soil microorganisms are responsible for a lot of important processes in the soil. They respire carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, they help recycling nitrogen and phosphorus for plants. If soil microorganisms respond to rain quickly, then so will carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus cycling. After a rainfall, carbon dioxide release from the soil increases. Microbes take up and release nitrogen more quickly, and nitrogen compounds can be washed away with the water. So rain can make a lot of things happen in the soil!
The predictions for the Sonoran Desert is that climate change will cause the area to become dryer, with larger rain events that will happen more sporadically, delivering less rain overall. This has led many scientists to ask how the Sonoran Desert ecosystem will change in the future. If rain events have this big of an effect, how will the ecosystem respond to changes in the amount and frequency of rainfall?
Kelly uses a watering can to simulate rainfall. |
Some of our research investigates how the soil community changes when the timing and amount of precipitation changes. We use watering cans to make "fake" rainfall events that happen in different amounts and at different frequencies, and then look at how the invertebrates living in the soil respond. We will be able to help answer these questions to predict the future for soil communities in the Sonoran Desert.
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