Drought-tolerant cyanobacteria and mosses as biotechnological tools to attain land degradation neutrality
-
Published:2021-04-13
Issue:1
Volume:21
Page:65-78
-
ISSN:1399-1183
-
Container-title:Web Ecology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Web Ecol.
Author:
Adessi AlessandraORCID, De Philippis Roberto, Rossi Federico
Abstract
Abstract. The induction of biocrusts through inoculation-based techniques has gained increasing scientific attention in the last 2 decades due to its potential to address issues related to soil degradation and desertification. The technology has shown the most rapid advances in the use of biocrust organisms, particularly cyanobacteria and mosses, as inoculants and biocrust initiators. Cyanobacteria and mosses are
poikilohydric organisms – i.e., desiccation-tolerant organisms capable of
reactivating their metabolism upon rehydration – that can settle on bare soils in abiotically stressing habitats, provided that selected species are used and an appropriate and customized protocol is applied. The success of inoculation of cyanobacteria and mosses depends on the inoculant's physiology, but also on the ability of the practitioner to
identify and control, with appropriate technical approaches in each case
study, those environmental factors that most influence the inoculant
settlement and its ability to develop biocrusts. This review illustrates the current knowledge and results of biocrust
induction biotechnologies that use cyanobacteria or mosses as inoculants. At the same time, this review's purpose is to highlight the current
technological gaps that hinder an efficient application of the technology in the field.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference122 articles.
1. Adessi, A., Cruz de Carvalho, R., De Philippis, R., Branquinho, C., and
Marques da Silva, J.: Microbial extracellular polymeric substances improve
water retention in dryland biological soil crusts, Soil Biol. Biochem., 116, 67–69, 2018. 2. Ali, A. S.: Response of rice plants to inoculation with indigenous strains
of cyanobacteria along with different levels of N-fertilizers, Adv. Biochem.
Biotechnol., 1, 1–14, 2015. 3. Antoninka, A., Bowker, M. A., Reed, S. C., and Doherty, K.: Production of
greenhouse-grown biocrust mosses and associated cyanobacteria to
rehabilitate dryland soil function, Restor. Ecol., 24, 324–335,
https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.12311, 2016. 4. Antoninka, A., Faist, A., Rodriguez-Caballero, E., Young, K. E., Chaudhary,
V. B., Condon, L. A., and Pyke, D. A.: Biological soil crusts in ecological
restoration: emerging research and perspectives, Restor. Ecol., 28,
S3–S8, https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.13201, 2020a. 5. Antoninka, A., Bowker, M. A., Barger, N. N., Belnap, J., Giraldo-Silva, A.,
Reed, S. C., Garcia-Pichel, F., and Duniway, M. C.: Addressing barriers to
improve biocrust colonization and establishment in dryland restoration,
Restor. Ecol., 28, S150–S159, 2020b.
Cited by
21 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|