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General relationships between abiotic soil properties and soil biota across spatial scales and different land-use types.

Authors :
Klaus Birkhofer
Ingo Schöning
Fabian Alt
Nadine Herold
Bernhard Klarner
Mark Maraun
Sven Marhan
Yvonne Oelmann
Tesfaye Wubet
Andrey Yurkov
Dominik Begerow
Doreen Berner
François Buscot
Rolf Daniel
Tim Diekötter
Roswitha B Ehnes
Georgia Erdmann
Christiane Fischer
Bärbel Foesel
Janine Groh
Jessica Gutknecht
Ellen Kandeler
Christa Lang
Gertrud Lohaus
Annabel Meyer
Heiko Nacke
Astrid Näther
Jörg Overmann
Andrea Polle
Melanie M Pollierer
Stefan Scheu
Michael Schloter
Ernst-Detlef Schulze
Waltraud Schulze
Jan Weinert
Wolfgang W Weisser
Volkmar Wolters
Marion Schrumpf
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 7, Iss 8, p e43292 (2012)
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2012.

Abstract

Very few principles have been unraveled that explain the relationship between soil properties and soil biota across large spatial scales and different land-use types. Here, we seek these general relationships using data from 52 differently managed grassland and forest soils in three study regions spanning a latitudinal gradient in Germany. We hypothesize that, after extraction of variation that is explained by location and land-use type, soil properties still explain significant proportions of variation in the abundance and diversity of soil biota. If the relationships between predictors and soil organisms were analyzed individually for each predictor group, soil properties explained the highest amount of variation in soil biota abundance and diversity, followed by land-use type and sampling location. After extraction of variation that originated from location or land-use, abiotic soil properties explained significant amounts of variation in fungal, meso- and macrofauna, but not in yeast or bacterial biomass or diversity. Nitrate or nitrogen concentration and fungal biomass were positively related, but nitrate concentration was negatively related to the abundances of Collembola and mites and to the myriapod species richness across a range of forest and grassland soils. The species richness of earthworms was positively correlated with clay content of soils independent of sample location and land-use type. Our study indicates that after accounting for heterogeneity resulting from large scale differences among sampling locations and land-use types, soil properties still explain significant proportions of variation in fungal and soil fauna abundance or diversity. However, soil biota was also related to processes that act at larger spatial scales and bacteria or soil yeasts only showed weak relationships to soil properties. We therefore argue that more general relationships between soil properties and soil biota can only be derived from future studies that consider larger spatial scales and different land-use types.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203 and 47364637
Volume :
7
Issue :
8
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.fbe47364637f41e7a25e5407c68ca792
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043292