Clark Theresa A, Russell Alexander, Greenwood Joshua L, Devitt Dale, Stanton Daniel, Stark Lloyd R
School of Life Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV, USA.
Department of Evolution, Ecology & Behavior, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, MN, USA.
Am J Bot. 2025 Feb;112(2):e16464. doi: 10.1002/ajb2.16464. Epub 2025 Feb 17.
Mosses provide many ecosystem functions and are the most vulnerable of biocrust organisms to climate change due to their sensitive water relations stressed by summer aridity. Given their small size, moss stress resistance may be more dependent on fine-scale habitat than macroclimate, but the sheltering role of habitat (i.e., habitat buffering) has never been compared to macroclimate and may have important implications for predicting critical biocrust moss refugia in changing climates.
We located three populations of a keystone biocrust moss, Syntrichia caninervis, spanning 1200 m of altitude, which comprised three macroclimate (elevation) zones of characterized plant communities in the Mojave Desert. We stratified 92 microsites along three aridity gradients: elevation zone, topography (aspect), and microhabitat (shrub proximity). We estimated summer photosynthetic stress (F/F) and aridity exposure (macroclimate, irradiance, and shade).
Microsite aridity exposure varied greatly, revealing exposed and buffered microhabitats at all three elevation zones. Moss stress did not differ by elevation zone despite the extensive macroclimate gradient, failing to support the high-elevation refugia hypothesis. Instead, stress was lowest on northerly-facing slopes and in microhabitats with greater shrub shading, while the importance of (and interactions between) topography, irradiance, and shade varied by elevation zone.
Fine-scale habitat structure appears physiologically more protective than high-elevation macroclimate and may protect some biocrust mosses from the brunt of climate change in widespread microrefugia throughout their current ranges. Our findings support a scale-focused vulnerability paradigm: microrefugia may be more important than macrorefugia for bolstering biocrust moss resistance to summer climate stress.
苔藓发挥着多种生态系统功能,并且由于其敏感的水分关系在夏季干旱时受到压力,它们是生物结皮生物中最易受气候变化影响的。鉴于其体型微小,苔藓的抗逆性可能更多地依赖于小尺度栖息地而非大气候,但栖息地的庇护作用(即栖息地缓冲)从未与大气候进行过比较,这可能对预测变化气候下关键生物结皮苔藓的避难所有重要意义。
我们在海拔跨度达1200米的范围内找到了基石生物结皮苔藓——尖叶绢藓的三个种群,它们分布在莫哈韦沙漠中具有特征性植物群落的三个大气候(海拔)区域。我们沿着三个干旱梯度对92个微生境进行了分层:海拔区域、地形(坡向)和微生境(与灌木的距离)。我们估算了夏季光合压力(F/F)和干旱暴露程度(大气候、辐照度和遮荫情况)。
微生境的干旱暴露程度差异很大,在所有三个海拔区域都发现了暴露和有缓冲作用的微生境。尽管存在广泛的大气候梯度,但苔藓压力在海拔区域间并无差异,这并不支持高海拔避难所假说。相反,在朝北的斜坡和有更多灌木遮荫的微生境中,压力最低,而地形、辐照度和遮荫的重要性(以及它们之间的相互作用)因海拔区域而异。
小尺度栖息地结构在生理上似乎比高海拔大气候更具保护作用,并且可能在其当前分布范围内的广泛微避难所中保护一些生物结皮苔藓免受气候变化的冲击。我们的研究结果支持一种以尺度为重点的脆弱性范式:微避难所对于增强生物结皮苔藓对夏季气候压力的抗性可能比宏避难所更重要。