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Productivity affects the density-body mass relationship of soil fauna communities

Authors :
Madhav P. Thakur
S. de Bie
Herbert H. T. Prins
Vincent Comor
Matty P. Berg
F. van Langevelde
Animal Ecology
Amsterdam Global Change Institute
Source :
Soil Biology and Biochemistry 72 (2014), Comor, V, Thakur, M P, Berg, M P, de Bie, S, Prins, H H T & van Langevelde, F 2014, ' Productivity affects the density–body mass relationship of soil fauna communities ', Soil Biology and Biochemistry, no. 72, pp. 203-211 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2014.02.003, Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 203-211. Elsevier Limited, ISSUE=72;STARTPAGE=203;ENDPAGE=211;ISSN=0038-0717;TITLE=Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 72, 203-211
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The productivity of ecosystems and their disturbance regime affect the structure of animal communities. However, it is not clear which trophic levels benefit the most from higher productivity or are the most impacted by disturbance. The density-body mass (DBM) relationship has been shown to reflect changes in the structure of communities subjected to environmental modifications, so far, mainly in aquatic systems. We tested how different seawater inundation frequencies and cattle grazing, which both disturbed and impacted the productivity of a terrestrial system, a salt marsh, affected the size structure of soil fauna communities, expressed by their DBM relationship. We hypothesized that either: (1) all the trophic levels of soil fauna would benefit from higher productivity (i.e., amount of litter mass), reflected by a higher Y-intercept of the DBM relationship; (2) only smaller animals would benefit, reflected by a lower slope of the relationship; (3) or only larger animals would benefit, reflected by a higher slope of the relationship. We collected a large range of soil fauna from different elevation levels in grazed and ungrazed areas, thence subjected to different levels of productivity, represented by litter mass, with the most inundated and grazed area as the least productive one. Considering that pore size must be smaller in inundated and grazed areas, productivity seemed to be a greater factor influencing species distribution than soil structure. We found slopes lower than-0.75, showing that large animals dominated the community. However, a difference between the DBM relationships of the most and least frequently inundated ungrazed sites indicated that higher productivity benefited the smaller animals. Our findings show that high productivity does not equally affect the different trophic levels of this soil fauna community, suggesting inefficient transfers of energy from one trophic level to another, as smaller species benefitted more from higher productivity. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00380717
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Soil Biology and Biochemistry 72 (2014), Comor, V, Thakur, M P, Berg, M P, de Bie, S, Prins, H H T & van Langevelde, F 2014, ' Productivity affects the density–body mass relationship of soil fauna communities ', Soil Biology and Biochemistry, no. 72, pp. 203-211 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2014.02.003, Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 203-211. Elsevier Limited, ISSUE=72;STARTPAGE=203;ENDPAGE=211;ISSN=0038-0717;TITLE=Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 72, 203-211
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d04649c38c6acf86e7ff94ed02d2de8b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2014.02.003