How the small host the small: cryptogam trait-mediated structuring of Antarctic microarthropod communities

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Abstract

Primary producers shape terrestrial biodiversity, but most research has focused on vascular plants, while the role of cryptogams (mosses, lichens and algae) remains under-explored. Cryptogams dominate Antarctic vegetation and support diverse microarthropod communities. However, how cryptogam traits influence these communities remains poorly understood. We therefore investigated the role of 28 cryptogam species and one vascular plant, via their functional traits, in shaping microarthropod communities across three contrasting sites (Signy Island, Byers Peninsula and Rothera) in the maritime Antarctic. We hypothesized that vegetation nitrogen and moisture content, major microarthropod taxa, and abiotic drivers interact to influence community patterns. Vegetation type effects on total microarthropod abundance were context-dependent. Mosses hosted more microarthropods than lichens at Signy Island, but these differences diminished further south. Microarthropod richness and springtail abundance were consistently higher in mosses than lichens across all sites, whereas mite abundance did not differ between vegetation types. Cryptogam nitrogen and moisture content strongly predicted microarthropod community patterns, although their influence varied with vegetation type and location. Among mosses, moisture increased springtail abundance but reduced diversity due to the dominance of Cryptopygus antarcticus. In lichens, nitrogen had a stronger influence than in mosses, particularly on mite abundance and Shannon diversity. As hypothesized, moisture was more important at the harshest southern site, while nitrogen had stronger effects at more productive northern locations. These findings emphasize that the influence of cryptogam traits in structuring Antarctic terrestrial biodiversity is modulated by the environmental context. With future shifts predicted in vegetation composition, the functional traits of emerging dominant species may restructure microarthropod communities and their ecological functions.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere08175
JournalEcography
Volume2026
Issue number1
Early online date12 Dec 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2026

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Ecography published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Nordic Society Oikos.

Funding

– This work was supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research NWO project no. ALWPP.2019.006, the Antarctic Biota Count (ABC) and would not have been possible without support from the British Antarctic Survey. We thank Julia Boogh and Giona Veronese for quantifying nitrogen contents of the Signy 2023 samples. Peter Convey is supported by NERC core funding to the BAS ‘Biodiversity, Evolution and Adaptation' Team. – This work and I.J. Klarenberg, R. Liu, J.H.C. Cornelissen and S. Bokhorst are supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research NWO project no. ALWPP.2019.006, the Antarctic Biota Count (ABC). Peter Convey is supported by NERC core funding to the BAS ‘Biodiversity, Evolution and Adaptation' Team.

Funders
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek
British Antarctic Survey
Natural Environment Research Council
Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

    Keywords

    • Antarctica
    • cryptogam
    • microarthropod
    • mite
    • plant traits
    • springtail

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