Effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica

Antarctic ecosystems are often considered nearly pristine because levels of anthropogenic disturbance are extremely low there. Nevertheless, over recent decades there has been a rapid increase in the number of people, researchers and tourists, visiting Antarctica. We evaluated, over 10 years, the di...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ayres, E., Nkem, J., Wall, D.H., Adams, B.J., Barrett, J.E, Broos, E.J., Parson, A.N., Powers, L.E., Simmons, B.L., Virginia, R.A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20023
_version_ 1855522324738998272
author Ayres, E.
Nkem, J.
Wall, D.H.
Adams, B.J.
Barrett, J.E
Broos, E.J.
Parson, A.N.
Powers, L.E.
Simmons, B.L.
Virginia, R.A.
author_browse Adams, B.J.
Ayres, E.
Barrett, J.E
Broos, E.J.
Nkem, J.
Parson, A.N.
Powers, L.E.
Simmons, B.L.
Virginia, R.A.
Wall, D.H.
author_facet Ayres, E.
Nkem, J.
Wall, D.H.
Adams, B.J.
Barrett, J.E
Broos, E.J.
Parson, A.N.
Powers, L.E.
Simmons, B.L.
Virginia, R.A.
author_sort Ayres, E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Antarctic ecosystems are often considered nearly pristine because levels of anthropogenic disturbance are extremely low there. Nevertheless, over recent decades there has been a rapid increase in the number of people, researchers and tourists, visiting Antarctica. We evaluated, over 10 years, the direct impact of foot traffic on the abundance of soil animals and soil properties in Taylor Valley within the McMurdo Dry Valleys region of Antarctica. We compared soils from minimally disturbed areas with soils from nearby paths that received intermediate and high levels of human foot traffic (i.e., up to approximately 80 passes per year). The nematodes Scottnema lindsayae and Eudorylaimus sp. were the most commonly found animal species, whereas rotifers and tardigrades were found only occasionally. On the highly trampled footpaths, abundance of S. lindsayae and Eudorylaimus sp. was up to 52 and 76% lower, respectively, than in untrampled areas. Moreover, reduction in S. lindsayae abundance was more pronounced after 10 years than 2 years and in the surface soil than in the deeper soil, presumably because of the longer period of disturbance and the greater level of physical disturbance experienced by the surface soil. The ratio of living to dead Eudorylaimus sp. also declined with increased trampling intensity, which is indicative of increased mortality or reduced fecundity. At one site there was evidence that high levels of trampling reduced soil CO2 fluxes, which is related to total biological activity in the soil. Our results show that even low levels of human traffic can significantly affect soil biota in this ecosystem and may alter ecosystem processes, such as carbon cycling. Consequently, management and conservation plans for Antarctic soils should consider th e high sensitivity of soil fauna to physical disturbance as human presence in this ecosystem increases.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace20023
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2008
publishDateRange 2008
publishDateSort 2008
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace200232025-01-24T14:12:38Z Effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica Ayres, E. Nkem, J. Wall, D.H. Adams, B.J. Barrett, J.E Broos, E.J. Parson, A.N. Powers, L.E. Simmons, B.L. Virginia, R.A. carbon ecotourism carbon dioxide soil chemical properties biodiversity Antarctic ecosystems are often considered nearly pristine because levels of anthropogenic disturbance are extremely low there. Nevertheless, over recent decades there has been a rapid increase in the number of people, researchers and tourists, visiting Antarctica. We evaluated, over 10 years, the direct impact of foot traffic on the abundance of soil animals and soil properties in Taylor Valley within the McMurdo Dry Valleys region of Antarctica. We compared soils from minimally disturbed areas with soils from nearby paths that received intermediate and high levels of human foot traffic (i.e., up to approximately 80 passes per year). The nematodes Scottnema lindsayae and Eudorylaimus sp. were the most commonly found animal species, whereas rotifers and tardigrades were found only occasionally. On the highly trampled footpaths, abundance of S. lindsayae and Eudorylaimus sp. was up to 52 and 76% lower, respectively, than in untrampled areas. Moreover, reduction in S. lindsayae abundance was more pronounced after 10 years than 2 years and in the surface soil than in the deeper soil, presumably because of the longer period of disturbance and the greater level of physical disturbance experienced by the surface soil. The ratio of living to dead Eudorylaimus sp. also declined with increased trampling intensity, which is indicative of increased mortality or reduced fecundity. At one site there was evidence that high levels of trampling reduced soil CO2 fluxes, which is related to total biological activity in the soil. Our results show that even low levels of human traffic can significantly affect soil biota in this ecosystem and may alter ecosystem processes, such as carbon cycling. Consequently, management and conservation plans for Antarctic soils should consider th e high sensitivity of soil fauna to physical disturbance as human presence in this ecosystem increases. 2008 2012-06-04T09:12:58Z 2012-06-04T09:12:58Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20023 en Ayres, E., Nkem, J., Wall, D.H., Adams, B.J., Barrett, J.E, Broos, E.J., Parson, A.N., Powers, L.E., Simmons, B.L., Virginia, R.A. 2008. Effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica . Conservation Biology 22 (6) :1544-1551. ISSN: 0888-8892.
spellingShingle carbon
ecotourism
carbon dioxide
soil chemical properties
biodiversity
Ayres, E.
Nkem, J.
Wall, D.H.
Adams, B.J.
Barrett, J.E
Broos, E.J.
Parson, A.N.
Powers, L.E.
Simmons, B.L.
Virginia, R.A.
Effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title Effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title_full Effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title_fullStr Effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title_short Effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title_sort effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the mcmurdo dry valleys antarctica
topic carbon
ecotourism
carbon dioxide
soil chemical properties
biodiversity
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20023
work_keys_str_mv AT ayrese effectsofhumantramplingonpopulationsofsoilfaunainthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica
AT nkemj effectsofhumantramplingonpopulationsofsoilfaunainthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica
AT walldh effectsofhumantramplingonpopulationsofsoilfaunainthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica
AT adamsbj effectsofhumantramplingonpopulationsofsoilfaunainthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica
AT barrettje effectsofhumantramplingonpopulationsofsoilfaunainthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica
AT broosej effectsofhumantramplingonpopulationsofsoilfaunainthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica
AT parsonan effectsofhumantramplingonpopulationsofsoilfaunainthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica
AT powersle effectsofhumantramplingonpopulationsofsoilfaunainthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica
AT simmonsbl effectsofhumantramplingonpopulationsofsoilfaunainthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica
AT virginiara effectsofhumantramplingonpopulationsofsoilfaunainthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica