Soil and soil properties are important. Biological soil crusts are present and important on arid and semi-arid rangelands.
On rangeland ecosystems, our eyes are often drawn to the obvious: the canopy or lack thereof, the brightly coloured wild flowers, healthy tussocks of bunchgrass and how much forage is available. The charismatic mega-flora gets noticed. But what might we be overlooking?
Biological soil crusts often fill-in the interspaces between bunchgrasses in arid and semi-arid rangelands. They increase site diversity, protect the soil surface from erosive forces and provide nitrogen, an important macronutrient to the soil through biological nitrogen fixation.
Biological soil crusts are made up of a broad and complex collection of living organisms, including lichens, mosses, liverworts, cyanobacteria, algae, fungi and bacteria. These complex associations grow on and within the uppermost layers of the soil. Due to their small size and obscurity, they remain difficult to identify at a species level. However, increasingly it is recognized that biological soil crusts play vital roles in ecosystem processes and maintaining ecosystem health.
Biological soil crusts can:
Biological soil crusts are a complex assemblage of living organisms, including lichens, mosses and more.