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Transcript
The Blooming Desert:
Bacteria and Wildflowers
Paula R. Gossard
July 27, 2005
Creating a Wildflower Collection
Desert Wildflowers have…
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Fewer leaves than mountain wildflowers, with any
compact foliage closer to the ground
Smaller leaves on long, wooly or waxy stems
Smaller flowers, with fewer blooms per plant
Less variety: 30 specimens in 5 days at four locations
vs. 20 specimens in 4 hours at one location
Winogradsky Columns


A miniature
ecosystem that
illustrates microbial
succession
Different organisms
grow at different
locations in the
column, depending on
their needs
Watering Hole Sediment
Cave Extremophiles


Sulfur bacteria get
their energy from
hydrogen sulfide
“Snottites” are cave
formations composed
of bacteria, bacterial
“slime” and bits of
minerals
Biological Soil Crusts


Formed by living
organisms and
their by-products
Surface soil
particles are bound
together by organic
materials
Biological Soil Crusts


Immature crusts are
generally flat and the
color of the soil; they
look like bare ground
Mature crusts are
usually bumpy and
dark-colored due to
the presence of many
organisms
Cyanobacteria, green and brown algae, mosses,
lichens, and sometimes liverwort or fungi live in crusts
Ecological Roles of Crusts



Aid in rainfall
absorption
Protect soil from
erosion and stabilize
slopes
Contribute nutrients
and organic matter to
desert soils
Cyanobacterial mucilage
Cyanobacterial mucilage
Human Impact on Crusts



Compressional
stresses cause great
damage to crusts
Windborne air
pollutants damage
crusts
Recovery can take
from 20-250 years