TY - JOUR
T1 - Fog controls biological cycling of soil phosphorus in the Coastal Cordillera of the Atacama Desert
AU - Sun, Xiaolei
AU - Amelung, Wulf
AU - Klumpp, Erwin
AU - Walk, Janek
AU - Mörchen, Ramona
AU - Böhm, Christoph
AU - Moradi, Ghazal
AU - May, Simon Matthias
AU - Tamburini, Federica
AU - Wang, Ye
AU - Bol, Roland
PY - 2024/1
Y1 - 2024/1
N2 - Soils in hyper-arid climates, such as the Chilean Atacama Desert, show indications of past and present forms of life despite extreme water limitations. We hypothesize that fog plays a key role in sustaining life. In particular, we assume that fog water is incorporated into soil nutrient cycles, with the inland limit of fog penetration corresponding to the threshold for biological cycling of soil phosphorus (P). We collected topsoil samples (0–10 cm) from each of 54 subsites, including sites in direct adjacency (<10 cm) and in 1 m distance to plants, along an aridity gradient across the Coastal Cordillera. Satellite-based fog detection revealed that Pacific fog penetrates up to 10 km inland, while inland sites at 10–23 km from the coast rely solely on sporadic rainfall for water supply. To assess biological P cycling we performed sequential P fractionation and determined oxygen isotope of HCl-extractable inorganic (Formula presented.). Total P (P
t) concentration exponentially increased from 336 mg kg
−1 to a maximum of 1021 mg kg
−1 in inland areas ≥10 km. With increasing distance from the coast, soil (Formula presented.) values declined exponentially from 16.6‰ to a constant 9.9‰ for locations ≥10 km inland. Biological cycling of HCl-P
i near the coast reached a maximum of 76%–100%, which could only be explained by the fact that fog water predominately drives biological P cycling. In inland regions, with minimal rainfall (<5 mm) as single water source, only 24 ± 14% of HCl-P
i was biologically cycled. We conclude that biological P cycling in the hyper-arid Atacama Desert is not exclusively but mainly mediated by fog, which thus controls apatite dissolution rates and related occurrence and spread of microbial life in this extreme environment.
AB - Soils in hyper-arid climates, such as the Chilean Atacama Desert, show indications of past and present forms of life despite extreme water limitations. We hypothesize that fog plays a key role in sustaining life. In particular, we assume that fog water is incorporated into soil nutrient cycles, with the inland limit of fog penetration corresponding to the threshold for biological cycling of soil phosphorus (P). We collected topsoil samples (0–10 cm) from each of 54 subsites, including sites in direct adjacency (<10 cm) and in 1 m distance to plants, along an aridity gradient across the Coastal Cordillera. Satellite-based fog detection revealed that Pacific fog penetrates up to 10 km inland, while inland sites at 10–23 km from the coast rely solely on sporadic rainfall for water supply. To assess biological P cycling we performed sequential P fractionation and determined oxygen isotope of HCl-extractable inorganic (Formula presented.). Total P (P
t) concentration exponentially increased from 336 mg kg
−1 to a maximum of 1021 mg kg
−1 in inland areas ≥10 km. With increasing distance from the coast, soil (Formula presented.) values declined exponentially from 16.6‰ to a constant 9.9‰ for locations ≥10 km inland. Biological cycling of HCl-P
i near the coast reached a maximum of 76%–100%, which could only be explained by the fact that fog water predominately drives biological P cycling. In inland regions, with minimal rainfall (<5 mm) as single water source, only 24 ± 14% of HCl-P
i was biologically cycled. We conclude that biological P cycling in the hyper-arid Atacama Desert is not exclusively but mainly mediated by fog, which thus controls apatite dissolution rates and related occurrence and spread of microbial life in this extreme environment.
KW - Atacama Desert
KW - fog
KW - hyper-aridity
KW - oxygen isotopes ratio in phosphates
KW - soil P cycle
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85179320867&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/gcb.17068
DO - 10.1111/gcb.17068
M3 - Article
SN - 1354-1013
VL - 30
JO - Global Change Biology
JF - Global Change Biology
IS - 1
M1 - e17068
ER -