Diversity and functional structure of soil animal communities suggest soil animal food webs to be buffered against changes in forest land use

被引:31
作者
Pollierer, Melanie M. [1 ]
Klarner, Bernhard [1 ]
Ott, David [2 ]
Digel, Christoph [1 ]
Ehnes, Roswitha B. [1 ]
Eitzinger, Bernhard [1 ]
Erdmann, Georgia [1 ]
Brose, Ulrich [3 ,4 ]
Maraun, Mark [1 ]
Scheu, Stefan [1 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Gottingen, JF Blumenbach Inst Zool & Anthropol, Untere Karspule 2, D-37073 Gottingen, Germany
[2] Zool Res Museum Alexander Koenig, Ctr Biodivers Monitoring Zbm, Adenauerallee 160, D-53113 Bonn, Germany
[3] German Ctr Integrat Biodivers Res iDiv, Deutsch Pl 5e, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany
[4] Friedrich Schiller Univ Jena, Inst Biodivers, Dornburger Str 159, D-07743 Jena, Germany
[5] Friedrich Schiller Univ Jena, Ctr Biodivers & Sustainable Land Use, Busgenweg 1, D-07743 Jena, Germany
关键词
Forest management; Disturbance; Structural equation modelling; Soil pH; Invertebrates; MICROBIAL BIOMASS; COLLEMBOLAN COMMUNITIES; LITTER DECOMPOSITION; MANAGEMENT INTENSITY; ARTHROPOD DIVERSITY; FUNGAL COMMUNITIES; PREDATORY MITES; BIODIVERSITY; BACTERIAL; ECOSYSTEM;
D O I
10.1007/s00442-021-04910-1
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Forest soil and litter is inhabited by a diverse community of animals, which directly and indirectly rely on dead organic matter as habitat and food resource. However, community composition may be driven by biotic or abiotic forces, and these vary with changes in habitat structure and resource supply associated with forest land use. To evaluate these changes, we compiled comprehensive data on the species composition of soil animal communities and environmental factors in forest types varying in land-use intensity in each of three regions in Germany, i.e., coniferous, young managed, old managed, and unmanaged beech forests. Coniferous forests featured high amounts of leaf litter and low microbial biomass concentrations contrasting in particular unmanaged beech forests. However, soil animal diversity and functional community composition differed little between forest types, indicating resilience against disturbance and forest land use. Structural equation modelling suggested that despite a significant influence of forest management on resource abundance and quality, the biomass of most soil fauna functional groups was not directly affected by forest management or resource abundance/quality, potentially because microorganisms hamper the propagation of nutrients to higher trophic levels. Instead, detritivore biomass depended heavily on soil pH. Macrofauna decomposers thrived at high pH, whereas mesofauna decomposers benefitted from low soil pH, but also from low biomass of macrofauna decomposers, potentially due to habitat modification by macrofauna decomposers. The strong influence of soil pH shows that decomposer communities are structured predominantly by regional abiotic factors exceeding the role of local biotic factors such as forest type.
引用
收藏
页码:195 / 209
页数:15
相关论文
共 83 条
[51]   Oribatid mite and collembolan diversity, density and community structure in a moder beech forest (Fagus sylvatica):: effects of mechanical perturbations [J].
Maraun, M ;
Salamon, JA ;
Schneider, K ;
Schaefer, M ;
Scheu, S .
SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2003, 35 (10) :1387-1394
[52]  
Maraun M, 2001, BIOL FERT SOILS, V34, P222
[53]  
MCPFE, 2007, MCPFE REPORT SUSTAIN
[54]   Field exclusion of large soil predators impacts lower trophic levels and decreases leaf-litter decomposition in dry forests [J].
Melguizo-Ruiz, Nereida ;
Jimenez-Navarro, Gerardo ;
De Mas, Eva ;
Pato, Joaquina ;
Scheu, Stefan ;
Austin, Amy T. ;
Wise, David H. ;
Moya-Larano, Jordi .
JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, 2020, 89 (02) :334-346
[55]   Tree species and earthworm effects on soil nutrient distribution and turnover in a northeastern United States common garden [J].
Melvin, April M. ;
Goodale, Christine L. .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2013, 43 (02) :180-187
[56]   LiDAR-derived canopy structure supports the more-individuals hypothesis for arthropod diversity in temperate forests [J].
Mueller, Joerg ;
Brandl, Roland ;
Braendle, Martin ;
Foerster, Bernhard ;
de Araujo, Bruno Cancian ;
Gossner, Martin M. ;
Ladas, Alexander ;
Wagner, Martin ;
Maraun, Mark ;
Schall, Peter ;
Schmidt, Stefan ;
Heurich, Marco ;
Thorn, Simon ;
Seibold, Sebastian .
OIKOS, 2018, 127 (06) :814-824
[57]   Litter elemental stoichiometry and biomass densities of forest soil invertebrates [J].
Ott, David ;
Digel, Christoph ;
Klarner, Bernhard ;
Maraun, Mark ;
Pollierer, Melanie ;
Rall, Bjoern C. ;
Scheu, Stefan ;
Seelig, Gesine ;
Brose, Ulrich .
OIKOS, 2014, 123 (10) :1212-1223
[58]   Biodiversity Differences between Managed and Unmanaged Forests: Meta-Analysis of Species Richness in Europe [J].
Paillet, Yoan ;
Berges, Laurent ;
Hjalten, Joakim ;
Odor, Peter ;
Avon, Catherine ;
Bernhardt-Roemermann, Markus ;
Bijlsma, Rienk-Jan ;
De Bruyn, Luc ;
Fuhr, Marc ;
Grandin, Ulf ;
Kanka, Robert ;
Lundin, Lars ;
Luque, Sandra ;
Magura, Tibor ;
Matesanz, Silvia ;
Meszaros, Ilona ;
Teresa Sebastia, M. - ;
Schmidt, Wolfgang ;
Standovar, Tibor ;
Tothmeresz, Bela ;
Uotila, Anneli ;
Valladares, Fernando ;
Vellak, Kai ;
Virtanen, Risto .
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2010, 24 (01) :101-112
[59]   Effect of nitrogen supply and defoliation on loss of organic compounds from roots of Festuca rubra [J].
Paterson, E ;
Sim, A .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2000, 51 (349) :1449-1457
[60]  
PENONE C, 2018, ECOL LETT