Compost promotes biocrust and plant growth in greenhouse cocultures for dryland restoration

Biocrusts and plants are the main ground cover and provide multiple ecosystem functions in arid and semiarid areas. As land degradation worsens and waste management is ever more pressing, the use of composted waste appears as a sustainable restoration practice to enhance vegetation reestablishment,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Restoration ecology Vol. 32; no. 6
Main Authors: Garibotti, Irene A., Gonzalez Polo, Marina, Satti, Patricia
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Malden, USA Wiley Periodicals, Inc 01-08-2024
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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Summary:Biocrusts and plants are the main ground cover and provide multiple ecosystem functions in arid and semiarid areas. As land degradation worsens and waste management is ever more pressing, the use of composted waste appears as a sustainable restoration practice to enhance vegetation reestablishment, but its effects on biocrusts still remain largely understudied. Moreover, developing appropriate methods for the co‐introduction of plants and biocrusts can be an emerging approach to reconstruct the biocrust/plant interaction and their associated functions. We evaluated the effect of different compost types on biocrust and plant cocultivations. We performed a greenhouse mesocosm experiment using urban organic solid waste and sewage sludge composts to grow a moss‐dominated biocrust and seedlings of two pioneer shrubs (Senecio filaginoides and Acaena splendens) in the Patagonian steppe. Both compost types successfully enhanced biocrust cover and chlorophyll a development, with cultured biocrusts being compositionally similar to the natural inoculum. Only the addition of composted sewage sludge enhanced seedling growth, and biocrusts had significant but opposite effects (positive/negative) on the two plant species we used for experimentation. This difference in the biocrust/plant interaction outcome was likely mediated by the significant influence of biocrusts on the relative availability of ammonium and nitrate and possible plant species‐specific preferences for different inorganic nitrogen forms. We conclude that the application of sewage sludge compost effectively improves the success of biocrust and plant cocultures, but species‐specific differences in the performance of seedlings growing in biocrusted soils impose limits on attempts to promote biocrust and plant joint restoration.
Bibliography:Author contributions: IAG conceived the research project; IAG, MGP, PS authors designed and implemented the experiment; IAG analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript; IAG, MGP, PS authors edited the manuscript.
ISSN:1061-2971
1526-100X
DOI:10.1111/rec.14020