A meta-analysis suggests climate change shifts structure of regional communities of soil invertebrates

被引:10
作者
Goncharov, Anton A. [1 ]
Leonov, Vladislav D. [1 ]
Rozanova, Oksana L. [1 ]
Semenina, Eugenia E. [1 ]
Tsurikov, Sergey M. [1 ]
Uvarov, Alexei V. [1 ]
Zuev, Andrey G. [1 ]
Tiunov, AlexeiV. [1 ]
机构
[1] Russian Acad Sci, AN Severtsov Inst Ecol & Evolut, Leninsky Pr 33, Moscow 119071, Russia
基金
俄罗斯科学基金会;
关键词
Collembola; Nematoda; Acari; Oligochaeta; Climate change; Mixed-effects modelling; ELEVATED ATMOSPHERIC CO2; LITTER DECOMPOSITION; IMPACTS; CARBON; FAUNA; BIODIVERSITY; RESPONSES; PRECIPITATION; TEMPERATURE; MOISTURE;
D O I
10.1016/j.soilbio.2023.109014
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Soil animals perform a range of essential ecosystem functions and can modify the effects of global change on terrestrial ecosystems. We evaluated responses of six major groups of soil animals (Acari (all groups), Oribatida, Collembola, Insecta, Nematoda, and Oligochaeta) to controlled changes in air temperature, precipitation level or carbon dioxide concentration by using random-effects modelling and mixed-effects meta-regression modelling. Along with the three global change factors, sixteen local climatic characteristics (such as mean annual temperature, Ko & BULL;ppen climate classification, vegetation type) were tested. Overall, 86 studies comprising 236 observations with mean duration of 51 months were selected as relevant for the analysis. Quantitative links between global change factors, local climate characteristics and changes in abundance of four taxonomic groups of soil animals were revealed. Warming and precipitation level were associated most strongly with population dynamics of soil invertebrates compared to elevated atmospheric CO2. Each 1 & DEG;C increase in air temperature was correlated with a mean of 12.5% (95% CI: 2.5%-22.6%) increase in Acari abundance, while populations of Collembola were declined by 9.6% (95% CI: -17.8% to -1.4%). Meanwhile, each 10% increase in precipitation level was correlated with the increase in the abundance of Nematoda by 1.4% (95% CI: -7.6% to 10.4%) and Oligochaeta by 34.7% (95% CI: 8.1%-61.2%). Considering IPCC estimates (SSP3-7.0 Scenario) of an average climate warming by 3.6 & DEG;C and a substantial variation in local precipitation levels (up to & PLUSMN;20%) by the end of the 21st century, strong local changes in the structure of detrital food webs are predicted by meta-regression models. In regions with decreased precipitation, the formation of soil food webs promoting carbon mineralization may be expected, while in regions with increased precipitation, the changes in detrital food web structure can contribute to the accumulation of carbon in the soil.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 71 条
  • [51] The Shared Socioeconomic Pathways and their energy, land use, and greenhouse gas emissions implications: An overview
    Riahi, Keywan
    van Vuuren, Detlef P.
    Kriegler, Elmar
    Edmonds, Jae
    O'Neill, Brian C.
    Fujimori, Shinichiro
    Bauer, Nico
    Calvin, Katherine
    Dellink, Rob
    Fricko, Oliver
    Lutz, Wolfgang
    Popp, Alexander
    Cuaresma, Jesus Crespo
    Samir, K. C.
    Leimbach, Marian
    Jiang, Leiwen
    Kram, Tom
    Rao, Shilpa
    Emmerling, Johannes
    Ebi, Kristie
    Hasegawa, Tomoko
    Havlik, Petr
    Humpenoeder, Florian
    da Silva, Lara Aleluia
    Smith, Steve
    Stehfest, Elke
    Bosetti, Valentina
    Eom, Jiyong
    Gernaat, David
    Masui, Toshihiko
    Rogelj, Joeri
    Strefler, Jessica
    Drouet, Laurent
    Krey, Volker
    Luderer, Gunnar
    Harmsen, Mathijs
    Takahashi, Kiyoshi
    Baumstark, Lavinia
    Doelman, Jonathan C.
    Kainuma, Mikiko
    Klimont, Zbigniew
    Marangoni, Giacomo
    Lotze-Campen, Hermann
    Obersteiner, Michael
    Tabeau, Andrzej
    Tavoni, Massimo
    [J]. GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2017, 42 : 153 - 168
  • [52] Biodiversity - Global biodiversity scenarios for the year 2100
    Sala, OE
    Chapin, FS
    Armesto, JJ
    Berlow, E
    Bloomfield, J
    Dirzo, R
    Huber-Sanwald, E
    Huenneke, LF
    Jackson, RB
    Kinzig, A
    Leemans, R
    Lodge, DM
    Mooney, HA
    Oesterheld, M
    Poff, NL
    Sykes, MT
    Walker, BH
    Walker, M
    Wall, DH
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2000, 287 (5459) : 1770 - 1774
  • [53] Investigating Relationship Between Soil Moisture and Precipitation Globally Using Remote Sensing Observations
    Sehler, Robin
    Li, Jingjing
    Reager, J. T.
    Ye, Hengchun
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY WATER RESEARCH & EDUCATION, 2019, 168 (01) : 106 - 118
  • [54] Singh Jaswinder, 2019, Soil Organisms, V91, P113, DOI 10.25674/so91iss3pp114
  • [55] Swift M.J., 1979, Decomposition in Terrestrial Ecosystems, DOI DOI 10.1063/1.1615673
  • [56] Soil animal responses to moisture availability are largely scale, not ecosystem dependent: insight from a cross-site study
    Sylvain, Zachary A.
    Wall, Diana H.
    Cherwin, Karie L.
    Peters, Debra P. C.
    Reichmann, Lara G.
    Sala, Osvaldo E.
    [J]. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2014, 20 (08) : 2631 - 2643
  • [57] Extinction risk from climate change
    Thomas, CD
    Cameron, A
    Green, RE
    Bakkenes, M
    Beaumont, LJ
    Collingham, YC
    Erasmus, BFN
    de Siqueira, MF
    Grainger, A
    Hannah, L
    Hughes, L
    Huntley, B
    van Jaarsveld, AS
    Midgley, GF
    Miles, L
    Ortega-Huerta, MA
    Peterson, AT
    Phillips, OL
    Williams, SE
    [J]. NATURE, 2004, 427 (6970) : 145 - 148
  • [58] Rapid exchange between soil carbon and atmospheric carbon dioxide driven by temperature change
    Trumbore, SE
    Chadwick, OA
    Amundson, R
    [J]. SCIENCE, 1996, 272 (5260) : 393 - 396
  • [59] Conducting Meta-Analyses in R with the metafor Package
    Viechtbauer, Wolfgang
    [J]. JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL SOFTWARE, 2010, 36 (03): : 1 - 48
  • [60] Global decomposition experiment shows soil animal impacts on decomposition are climate-dependent
    Wall, Diana H.
    Bradford, Mark A.
    St. John, Mark G.
    Trofymow, John A.
    Behan-Pelletier, Valerie
    Bignell, Davi D. E.
    Dangerfield, J. Mark
    Parton, William J.
    Rusek, Josef
    Voigt, Winfried
    Wolters, Volkmar
    Gardel, Holley Zadeh
    Ayuke, Fred O.
    Bashford, Richard
    Beljakova, Olga I.
    Bohlen, Patrick J.
    Brauman, Alain
    Flemming, Stephen
    Henschel, Joh R.
    Johnson, Dan L.
    Jones, T. Hefin
    Kovarova, Marcela
    Kranabetter, J. Marty
    Kutny, Les
    Lin, Kuo-Chuan
    Maryati, Mohamed
    Masse, Dominique
    Pokarzhevskii, Andrei
    Rahman, Homathevi
    Sabara, Millor G.
    Salamon, Joerg-Alfred
    Swift, Michael J.
    Varela, Amanda
    Vasconcelos, Heraldo L.
    White, Don
    Zou, Xiaoming
    [J]. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2008, 14 (11) : 2661 - 2677