Global distribution of soil fauna functional groups and their estimated litter consumption across biomes

被引:0
|
作者
Petr Heděnec
Juan Jose Jiménez
Jabbar Moradi
Xavier Domene
Davorka Hackenberger
Sebastien Barot
Aline Frossard
Lidia Oktaba
Juliane Filser
Pavel Kindlmann
Jan Frouz
机构
[1] Institute of Soil Biology and Biogeochemistry,Biology Centre ACR
[2] University Malaysia Terengganu,Institute of Tropical Biodiversity and Sustainable Development
[3] IPE-CSIC,Pyrenean Institute of Ecology
[4] CREAF- Universitat Autònoma Barcelona,Department of Biology
[5] Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek,Soil Science Department, Agriculture Institute, Warsaw
[6] IEES-Paris (CNRS,Department of General and Theoretical Ecology, UFT – Centre for Environmental Research and Sustainable Technology
[7] UPMC,Faculty of Science, Institute for Environmental Studies
[8] IRD,undefined
[9] INRA,undefined
[10] UPEC),undefined
[11] Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL,undefined
[12] University of Life Sciences-SGGW,undefined
[13] University of Bremen,undefined
[14] Charles University,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Soil invertebrates (i.e., soil fauna) are important drivers of many key processes in soils including soil aggregate formation, water retention, and soil organic matter transformation. Many soil fauna groups directly or indirectly participate in litter consumption. However, the quantity of litter consumed by major faunal groups across biomes remains unknown. To estimate this quantity, we reviewed > 1000 observations from 70 studies that determined the biomass of soil fauna across various biomes and 200 observations from 44 studies on litter consumption by soil fauna. To compare litter consumption with annual litterfall, we analyzed 692 observations from 24 litterfall studies and 183 observations from 28 litter stock studies. The biomass of faunal groups was highest in temperate grasslands and then decreased in the following order: boreal forest > temperate forest > tropical grassland > tundra > tropical forest > Mediterranean ecosystems > desert and semidesert. Tropical grasslands, desert biomes, and Mediterranean ecosystems were dominated by termites. Temperate grasslands were dominated by omnivores, while temperate forests were dominated by earthworms. On average, estimated litter consumption (relative to total litter input) ranged from a low of 14.9% in deserts to a high of 100.4% in temperate grassland. Litter consumption by soil fauna was greater in grasslands than in forests. This is the first study to estimate the effect of different soil fauna groups on litter consumption and related processes at global scale.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Global distribution of soil fauna functional groups and their estimated litter consumption across biomes
    Hedenec, Petr
    Jose Jimenez, Juan
    Moradi, Jabbar
    Domene, Xavier
    Hackenberger, Davorka
    Barot, Sebastien
    Frossard, Aline
    Oktaba, Lidia
    Filser, Juliane
    Kindlmann, Pavel
    Frouz, Jan
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2022, 12 (01)
  • [2] Climate and litter quality differently modulate the effects of soil fauna on litter decomposition across biomes
    Garcia-Palacios, Pablo
    Maestre, Fernando T.
    Kattge, Jens
    Wall, Diana H.
    [J]. ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2013, 16 (08) : 1045 - 1053
  • [3] Decomposition of leaf litter mixtures across biomes: The role of litter identity, diversity and soil fauna
    Zhou, Shixing
    Butenschoen, Olaf
    Barantal, Sandra
    Handa, Ira Tanya
    Makkonen, Marika
    Vos, Veronique
    Aerts, Rien
    Berg, Matty P.
    McKie, Brendan
    Van Ruijven, Jasper
    Hattenschwiler, Stephan
    Scheu, Stefan
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2020, 108 (06) : 2283 - 2297
  • [4] Taxonomic and functional patterns across soil microbial communities of global biomes
    Noronha, Melline Fontes
    Lacerda Junior, Gileno Vieira
    Gilbert, Jack A.
    de Oliveira, Valeria Maia
    [J]. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2017, 609 : 1064 - 1074
  • [5] Climate and litter quality differently modulate the effects of soil fauna on litter decomposition across biomes (vol 16, pg 1045, 2013)
    Garcia-Palacios, Pablo
    Maestre, Fernando T.
    Kattge, Jens
    Wall, Diana H.
    [J]. ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2013, 16 (11) : 1418 - 1418
  • [6] Litter quality impacts on grassland litter decomposition are differently dependent on soil fauna across time
    Smith, VC
    Bradford, MA
    [J]. APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2003, 24 (02) : 197 - 203
  • [7] Litter mixture effects on nitrogen dynamics during decomposition predominantly vary among biomes but little with litter identity, diversity and soil fauna
    Zhou, Shixing
    Butenschoen, Olaf
    Handa, I. Tanya
    Berg, Matty P.
    McKie, Brendan
    Huang, Congde
    Hättenschwiler, Stephan
    Scheu, Stefan
    [J]. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 2024, 199
  • [8] The global distribution of grass functional traits within grassy biomes
    Jardine, Emma C.
    Thomas, Gavin H.
    Forrestel, Elisabeth J.
    Lehmann, Caroline E. R.
    Osborne, Colin P.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2020, 47 (03) : 553 - 565
  • [9] Distribution patterns of soil lichens across the principal biomes of southern Africa
    Zedda, L.
    Grongroft, A.
    Schultz, M.
    Petersen, A.
    Mills, A.
    Rambold, G.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS, 2011, 75 (02) : 215 - 220
  • [10] Soil fauna, guilds, functional groups and ecosystem processes
    Brussaard, L
    [J]. APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 1998, 9 (1-3) : 123 - 135