Anemochory of diapausing stages of microinvertebrates in North American drylands.

J A Rivas, T Schr��der, T E Gill, R L Wallace, E J Walsh
Author Information
  1. J A Rivas: Department of Biological Sciences, University of Texas at El Paso, 500 West University Avenue, El Paso, TX, USA 79968, jarivas@utep.edu. ORCID
  2. T Schr��der: Department of Biological Sciences, University of Texas at El Paso, 500 West University Avenue, El Paso, TX, USA 79968, schroeder@gewaesseroekologie.eu.
  3. T E Gill: Department of Geological Sciences and Environmental Science and Engineering Program, University of Texas at El Paso, 500 West University Avenue, El Paso, TX, USA 79968, tegill@utep.edu.
  4. R L Wallace: Department of Biology, Ripon College, 300 W. Seward St. Ripon, WI, USA 54971, wallacer@ripon.edu.
  5. E J Walsh: Department of Biological Sciences, University of Texas at El Paso, 500 West University Avenue, El Paso, TX, USA 79968. ORCID

Abstract

1. Dry, ephemeral, desert wetlands are major sources of windblown sediment, as well as repositories for diapausing stages (propagules) of aquatic invertebrates. Zooplankton propagules are of the same size range as sand and dust grains. They can be deflated and transported in windstorm events. This study provides the evidence that dust storms aid in dispersal of microinvertebrate propagules via anemochory (aeolian transport). 2. We monitored 91 windstorms at six sites in the southwestern U.S. over a 17-year period. The primary study site was located in El Paso, Texas in the northern Chihuahuan Desert. Additional samples were collected from the Southern High Plains region. Dust carried by these events was collected and rehydrated to hatch viable propagules transported with it. 3. Using samples collected over a six-year period, 21 m above the ground which included 59 storm events, we tested the hypothesis that transport of propagules is correlated with storm intensity by monitoring meteorological conditions such as storm duration, wind direction, wind speed, and PM (fine dust concentration). An air quality monitoring site located adjacent to the dust samplers provided quantitative hourly measurements. 4. Rehydration results from all events showed that ciliates were found in 92% of the samples, rotifers in 81%, branchiopods in 29%, ostracods in 4%, nematodes in 13%, gastrotrichs in 16%, and tardigrades in 3%. Overall, four bdelloid and 11 monogonont rotifer species were identified from rehydrated windblown dust samples. 5. PCA results indicated gastrotrichs, branchiopods, nematodes, tardigrades, and monogonont rotifer occurrence positively correlated with PM and dust event duration. bdelloid rotifers were correlated with amount of sediment deposited. NMDS showed a significant relationship between PM and occurrence of some taxa. Zero-inflated, general linear models with mixed-effects indicated significant relationships with bdelloid and nematode transport and PM. 6. Thus, windstorms with high particulate matter concentration and long duration are more likely to transport microinvertebrate diapausing stages in drylands.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. G12 MD007592/NIMHD NIH HHS
  2. G12 RR008124/NCRR NIH HHS

Word Cloud

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