Responses of bryosphere fauna to drought across a boreal forest chronosequence

被引:0
作者
Roger Grau-Andrés
Sylvia Thieffry
Shanyi Tian
David A. Wardle
Paul Kardol
机构
[1] Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU),Department of Forest Ecology and Management
[2] Nanjing Agricultural University,Soil Ecology Lab, College of Resources and Environmental Sciences
[3] Nanyang Technological University,Asian School of the Environment
来源
Oecologia | 2022年 / 200卷
关键词
Climate change; Mites; Moss; Nematodes; Precipitation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Projected changes in precipitation regimes can greatly impact soil biota, which in turn alters key ecosystem functions. In moss-dominated ecosystems, the bryosphere (i.e., the ground moss layer including live and senesced moss) plays a key role in carbon and nutrient cycling, and it hosts high abundances of microfauna (i.e., nematodes and tardigrades) and mesofauna (i.e., mites and springtails). However, we know very little about how bryosphere fauna responds to precipitation, and whether this response changes across environmental gradients. Here, we used a mesocosm experiment to study the effect of volume and frequency of precipitation on the abundance and community composition of functional groups of bryosphere fauna. Hylocomium splendens bryospheres were sampled from a long-term post-fire boreal forest chronosequence in northern Sweden which varies greatly in environmental conditions. We found that reduced precipitation promoted the abundance of total microfauna and of total mesofauna, but impaired predaceous/omnivorous nematodes, and springtails. Generally, bryosphere fauna responded more strongly to precipitation volume than to precipitation frequency. For some faunal functional groups, the effects of precipitation frequency were stronger at reduced precipitation volumes. Context-dependency effects were found for microfauna only: microfauna was more sensitive to precipitation in late-successional forests (i.e., those with lower productivity and soil nutrient availability) than in earlier-successional forests. Our results also suggest that drought-induced changes in trophic interactions and food resources in the bryosphere may increase faunal abundance. Consequently, drier bryospheres that may result from climate change could promote carbon and nutrient turnover from fauna activity, especially in older, less productive forests.
引用
收藏
页码:231 / 245
页数:14
相关论文
共 234 条
[1]  
Anderson MJ(2001)A new method for non-parametric multivariate analysis of variance: non-parametric MANOVA for ecology Austral Ecol 26 32-46
[2]  
Bansal S(2012)Response of photosynthetic carbon gain to ecosystem retrogression of vascular plants and mosses in the boreal forest Oecologia 169 661-672
[3]  
Nilsson M-C(2014)Belowground biodiversity and ecosystem functioning Nature 515 505-511
[4]  
Wardle DA(2018)Drivers of decomposition and the detrital invertebrate community differ across a hummock-hollow microtopology in Boreal peatlands Écoscience 25 39-48
[5]  
Bardgett RD(2021)Responses of oribatid mites to warming in boreal peatlands depend on fen type Pedobiologia 26 268-284
[6]  
van der Putten WH(1998)Dynamics and stratification of functional groups of micro- and mesoarthropods in the organic layer of a Scots pine forest Biol Fertil Soils 44 236-244
[7]  
Barreto C(2017)Divergent surface and total soil moisture projections under global warming: future soil moisture changes in coupled model intercomparison project phase 5 Geophys Res Lett 165 553-565
[8]  
Lindo Z(2011)A meta-analysis of responses of soil biota to global change Oecologia 379 121-133
[9]  
Barreto C(2014)Impact of understory mosses and dwarf shrubs on soil micro-arthropods in a boreal forest chronosequence Plant Soil 83 14-19
[10]  
Branfireun BA(1990)The maturity index: an ecological measure of environmental disturbance based on nematode species composition Oecologia 212 13-22