Publications by authors named "Dimaris Acosta-Mercado"

Changes in global and regional precipitation regimes are among the most pervasive components of climate change. Intensification of rainfall cycles, ranging from frequent downpours to severe droughts, could cause widespread, but largely unknown, alterations to trophic structure and ecosystem function. We conducted multi-site coordinated experiments to show how variation in the quantity and evenness of rainfall modulates trophic structure in 210 natural freshwater microcosms (tank bromeliads) across Central and South America (18°N to 29°S).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Ecosystems may be more affected by extreme climate events than by average climate changes, prompting a need for broader experiments that assess ecosystem sensitivity.
  • Researchers studied the impact of manipulated rainfall on tank bromeliads at seven Neotropic sites, analyzing invertebrate functional composition, biomass, and ecosystem fluxes.
  • The study found that invertebrate functional composition was most sensitive to rainfall changes, while biomass showed little change, suggesting that local variations in hydrology and species composition complicate establishing universal thresholds for ecosystem health under climate change.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Soil protozoa, and ciliates in particular, represent a microbial group abundant in the rhizosphere with an influential role on nutrient cycling. Under laboratory conditions, ciliates regulate the size and the composition of bacterial communities, and appear to stimulate ammonification and nitrification. In spite of their important ecological role, our understanding about the factors that control their diversity and abundance in natural forest ecosystems is still rudimentary.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It has been suggested that species loss from microbial groups low in diversity that occupy trophic positions close to the base of the detrital food web could be critical for terrestrial ecosystem functioning. Among the protozoans within the soil microbial loop, ciliates are presumably the least abundant and of low diversity. However, the lack of a standardized method to quantitatively enumerate and identify them has hampered our knowledge about the magnitude of their active and potential diversity, and about the interactions in which they are involved.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF