Linking effect traits of soil fauna to processes of organic matter transformation

Archive ouverte

Bonfanti, Jonathan | Potapov, Anton, M | Angst, Gerrit | Ganault, Pierre | Briones, Maria, J I | Calderón‐sanou, Irene | Chen, Ting‐wen | Conti, Erminia | Degrune, Florine | Eisenhauer, Nico | Ferlian, Olga | Hackenberger, Davorka | Hauer, Amelie | Hedde, Mickaël | Hohberg, Karin | Krogh, Paul, Henning | Mulder, Christian | Perez‐roig, Camila | Russell, David | Shelef, Oren | Zhou, Zheng | Zuev, Andrey, G | Berg, Matty, P

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. Soil organic matter (SOM) transformation processes are regulated by the activities of plants, microbes, and fauna. Compared with plants and microbes, effects of soil fauna are less understood because of their high taxonomic and functional diversity, and mix of direct and indirect effect mechanisms. Trait-based approaches offer a generic perspective to quantify mechanistic relationships between soil fauna and SOM transformations, including decomposition, translocation, and stabilisation of organic carbon. Yet, at present, we lack a consensus concerning relevant key effect traits of soil fauna (i.e. those affecting ecosystem functioning).

2. Here, we address this knowledge gap by focusing on relationships between soil fauna effect traits and SOM transformations. Based on existing literature, we identify key processes linked to SOM transformations, and fauna effect traits universally applicable across taxa and soil types, and discuss the process-trait links.

3. We define eight SOM transformation processes that are directly affected by soil fauna: (i) litter mass loss, (ii) litter fragmentation, (iii) SOM aggregation in faeces, (iv) SOM aggregation in soil mineral particles, (v) decomposition of faeces, (vi) SOM and mineral translocation, (vii) pore space creation and maintenance and (viii) SOM stabilisation. We link these processes to general effect traits classified into four categories: (a) food selection and ingestion, (b), digestion and excretion, (c) mobility, and (d) body mass and metabolic rate. We also propose proxies when effect trait measurements are laborious.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Global distribution of earthworm diversity

Archive ouverte | Phillips, Helen | CCSD

International audience. Soil organisms, including earthworms, are a key component of terrestrial ecosystems. However, little is known about their diversity, distribution, and the threats affecting them. Here, we com...

Edaphobase 2.0: Advanced international data warehouse for collating and using soil biodiversity datasets

Archive ouverte | Russell, David, J | CCSD

International audience. Soil and soil-biodiversity protection are increasingly important issues in environmental science and policies, requiring the availability of high-quality empirical data on soil biodiversity. ...

Global fine-resolution data on springtail abundance and community structure

Archive ouverte | Potapov, Anton, M | CCSD

International audience. Springtails (Collembola) inhabit soils from the Arctic to the Antarctic and comprise an estimated ~32% of all terrestrial arthropods on Earth. Here, we present a global, spatially-explicit da...

Chargement des enrichissements...