Back to Search Start Over

The development of terrestrial ecosystems emerging after glacier retreat

Authors :
Ficetola, G
Marta, S
Guerrieri, A
Cantera, I
Bonin, A
Cauvy-Fraunié, S
Ambrosini, R
Caccianiga, M
Anthelme, F
Azzoni, R
Almond, P
Alviz Gazitúa, P
Ceballos Lievano, J
Chand, P
Chand Sharma, M
Clague, J
Cochachín Rapre, J
Compostella, C
Encarnación, R
Dangles, O
Deline, P
Eger, A
Erokhin, S
Franzetti, A
Gielly, L
Gili, F
Gobbi, M
Hågvar, S
Kaufmann, R
Khedim, N
Meneses, R
Morales-Martínez, M
Peyre, G
Pittino, F
Proietto, A
Rabatel, A
Sieron, K
Tielidze, L
Urseitova, N
Yang, Y
Zaginaev, V
Zerboni, A
Zimmer, A
Diolaiuti, G
Taberlet, P
Poulenard, J
Fontaneto, D
Thuiller, W
Carteron, A
Ficetola, Gentile Francesco
Marta, Silvio
Guerrieri, Alessia
Cantera, Isabel
Bonin, Aurélie
Cauvy-Fraunié, Sophie
Ambrosini, Roberto
Caccianiga, Marco
Anthelme, Fabien
Azzoni, Roberto Sergio
Almond, Peter
Alviz Gazitúa, Pablo
Ceballos Lievano, Jorge Luis
Chand, Pritam
Chand Sharma, Milap
Clague, John J.
Cochachín Rapre, Justiniano Alejo
Compostella, Chiara
Encarnación, Rolando Cruz
Dangles, Olivier
Deline, Philip
Eger, Andre
Erokhin, Sergey
Franzetti, Andrea
Gielly, Ludovic
Gili, Fabrizio
Gobbi, Mauro
Hågvar, Sigmund
Kaufmann, Rüdiger
Khedim, Norine
Meneses, Rosa Isela
Morales-Martínez, Marco Aurelio
Peyre, Gwendolyn
Pittino, Francesca
Proietto, Angela
Rabatel, Antoine
Sieron, Katrin
Tielidze, Levan
Urseitova, Nurai
Yang, Yan
Zaginaev, Vitalii
Zerboni, Andrea
Zimmer, Anaïs
Diolaiuti, Guglielmina Adele
Taberlet, Pierre
Poulenard, Jerome
Fontaneto, Diego
Thuiller, Wilfried
Carteron, Alexis
Ficetola, G
Marta, S
Guerrieri, A
Cantera, I
Bonin, A
Cauvy-Fraunié, S
Ambrosini, R
Caccianiga, M
Anthelme, F
Azzoni, R
Almond, P
Alviz Gazitúa, P
Ceballos Lievano, J
Chand, P
Chand Sharma, M
Clague, J
Cochachín Rapre, J
Compostella, C
Encarnación, R
Dangles, O
Deline, P
Eger, A
Erokhin, S
Franzetti, A
Gielly, L
Gili, F
Gobbi, M
Hågvar, S
Kaufmann, R
Khedim, N
Meneses, R
Morales-Martínez, M
Peyre, G
Pittino, F
Proietto, A
Rabatel, A
Sieron, K
Tielidze, L
Urseitova, N
Yang, Y
Zaginaev, V
Zerboni, A
Zimmer, A
Diolaiuti, G
Taberlet, P
Poulenard, J
Fontaneto, D
Thuiller, W
Carteron, A
Ficetola, Gentile Francesco
Marta, Silvio
Guerrieri, Alessia
Cantera, Isabel
Bonin, Aurélie
Cauvy-Fraunié, Sophie
Ambrosini, Roberto
Caccianiga, Marco
Anthelme, Fabien
Azzoni, Roberto Sergio
Almond, Peter
Alviz Gazitúa, Pablo
Ceballos Lievano, Jorge Luis
Chand, Pritam
Chand Sharma, Milap
Clague, John J.
Cochachín Rapre, Justiniano Alejo
Compostella, Chiara
Encarnación, Rolando Cruz
Dangles, Olivier
Deline, Philip
Eger, Andre
Erokhin, Sergey
Franzetti, Andrea
Gielly, Ludovic
Gili, Fabrizio
Gobbi, Mauro
Hågvar, Sigmund
Kaufmann, Rüdiger
Khedim, Norine
Meneses, Rosa Isela
Morales-Martínez, Marco Aurelio
Peyre, Gwendolyn
Pittino, Francesca
Proietto, Angela
Rabatel, Antoine
Sieron, Katrin
Tielidze, Levan
Urseitova, Nurai
Yang, Yan
Zaginaev, Vitalii
Zerboni, Andrea
Zimmer, Anaïs
Diolaiuti, Guglielmina Adele
Taberlet, Pierre
Poulenard, Jerome
Fontaneto, Diego
Thuiller, Wilfried
Carteron, Alexis
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The global retreat of glaciers is dramatically altering mountain and high-latitude landscapes, with new ecosystems developing from apparently barren substrates1–4. The study of these emerging ecosystems is critical to understanding how climate change interacts with microhabitat and biotic communities and determines the future of ice-free terrains1,5. Here, using a comprehensive characterization of ecosystems (soil properties, microclimate, productivity and biodiversity by environmental DNA metabarcoding6) across 46 proglacial landscapes worldwide, we found that all the environmental properties change with time since glaciers retreated, and that temperature modulates the accumulation of soil nutrients. The richness of bacteria, fungi, plants and animals increases with time since deglaciation, but their temporal patterns differ. Microorganisms colonized most rapidly in the first decades after glacier retreat, whereas most macroorganisms took longer. Increased habitat suitability, growing complexity of biotic interactions and temporal colonization all contribute to the increase in biodiversity over time. These processes also modify community composition for all the groups of organisms. Plant communities show positive links with all other biodiversity components and have a key role in ecosystem development. These unifying patterns provide new insights into the early dynamics of deglaciated terrains and highlight the need for integrated surveillance of their multiple environmental properties5.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
STAMPA, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1456740622
Document Type :
Electronic Resource