Increased frequency of drought reduces species richness of enchytraeid communities in both wet and dry heathland soils

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Increased frequency of drought reduces species richness of enchytraeid communities in both wet and dry heathland soils. / Holmstrup, Martin; Sørensen, Jesper Givskov; Maraldo, Kristine; Schmidt, Inger Kappel; Mason, Sharon ; Tietema, Albert; Smith, Andrew R.; Emmett, Bridget; Schmelz, Rüdiger M.; Bataillon, Thomas; Beier, Claus; Ehlers, Bodil Kirstine.

In: Soil Biology & Biochemistry, Vol. 53, 2012, p. 43-49.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Holmstrup, M, Sørensen, JG, Maraldo, K, Schmidt, IK, Mason, S, Tietema, A, Smith, AR, Emmett, B, Schmelz, RM, Bataillon, T, Beier, C & Ehlers, BK 2012, 'Increased frequency of drought reduces species richness of enchytraeid communities in both wet and dry heathland soils', Soil Biology & Biochemistry, vol. 53, pp. 43-49. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2012.05.001

APA

Holmstrup, M., Sørensen, J. G., Maraldo, K., Schmidt, I. K., Mason, S., Tietema, A., Smith, A. R., Emmett, B., Schmelz, R. M., Bataillon, T., Beier, C., & Ehlers, B. K. (2012). Increased frequency of drought reduces species richness of enchytraeid communities in both wet and dry heathland soils. Soil Biology & Biochemistry, 53, 43-49. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2012.05.001

Vancouver

Holmstrup M, Sørensen JG, Maraldo K, Schmidt IK, Mason S, Tietema A et al. Increased frequency of drought reduces species richness of enchytraeid communities in both wet and dry heathland soils. Soil Biology & Biochemistry. 2012;53:43-49. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2012.05.001

Author

Holmstrup, Martin ; Sørensen, Jesper Givskov ; Maraldo, Kristine ; Schmidt, Inger Kappel ; Mason, Sharon ; Tietema, Albert ; Smith, Andrew R. ; Emmett, Bridget ; Schmelz, Rüdiger M. ; Bataillon, Thomas ; Beier, Claus ; Ehlers, Bodil Kirstine. / Increased frequency of drought reduces species richness of enchytraeid communities in both wet and dry heathland soils. In: Soil Biology & Biochemistry. 2012 ; Vol. 53. pp. 43-49.

Bibtex

@article{aabb81506fbe4cfe8c3e3b639bab5871,
title = "Increased frequency of drought reduces species richness of enchytraeid communities in both wet and dry heathland soils",
abstract = "Studies of biological responses in the terrestrial environment to rapid changes in climate have mostly been concerned with above-ground biota, whereas less is known of belowground organisms. The present study focuses on enchytraeids (Oligochaeta) of heathland ecosystems and how the enchytraeid community has responded to simulated climate change in a long-term field experiment. Either increased temperature or repeated drought was applied for 13 years to field plots located in Wales, The Netherlands and Denmark representing a gradient in precipitation and annual temperature fluctuations thereby providing an opportunity to study biological responses on a local (within sites) and regional scale. Warming treatments increasing night-time temperature (0.5–1 °C higher than ambient at 5 cm soil depth) had no detectable effects on the enchytraeid communities. Increased intensity and frequency of drought had rather weak persistent effects on total enchytraeid abundance suggesting that ecosystem functions of enchytraeids may only be transiently impacted by repeated spring or summer drought. However, drought treatment had persistent negative effects on species richness and community structure across sites. Drought treated plots harboured only 35–65% of the species present in control plots, and the reduction of species richness was most pronounced at the driest sites. It is discussed that soil invertebrates, due to their weak migratory potential, may be more liable to extinction under changing climatic conditions than above-ground species, and therefore consequences of climate change to soil organisms need particular attention in future research.",
author = "Martin Holmstrup and S{\o}rensen, {Jesper Givskov} and Kristine Maraldo and Schmidt, {Inger Kappel} and Sharon Mason and Albert Tietema and Smith, {Andrew R.} and Bridget Emmett and Schmelz, {R{\"u}diger M.} and Thomas Bataillon and Claus Beier and Ehlers, {Bodil Kirstine}",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1016/j.soilbio.2012.05.001",
language = "English",
volume = "53",
pages = "43--49",
journal = "Soil Biology & Biochemistry",
issn = "0038-0717",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Increased frequency of drought reduces species richness of enchytraeid communities in both wet and dry heathland soils

AU - Holmstrup, Martin

AU - Sørensen, Jesper Givskov

AU - Maraldo, Kristine

AU - Schmidt, Inger Kappel

AU - Mason, Sharon

AU - Tietema, Albert

AU - Smith, Andrew R.

AU - Emmett, Bridget

AU - Schmelz, Rüdiger M.

AU - Bataillon, Thomas

AU - Beier, Claus

AU - Ehlers, Bodil Kirstine

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Studies of biological responses in the terrestrial environment to rapid changes in climate have mostly been concerned with above-ground biota, whereas less is known of belowground organisms. The present study focuses on enchytraeids (Oligochaeta) of heathland ecosystems and how the enchytraeid community has responded to simulated climate change in a long-term field experiment. Either increased temperature or repeated drought was applied for 13 years to field plots located in Wales, The Netherlands and Denmark representing a gradient in precipitation and annual temperature fluctuations thereby providing an opportunity to study biological responses on a local (within sites) and regional scale. Warming treatments increasing night-time temperature (0.5–1 °C higher than ambient at 5 cm soil depth) had no detectable effects on the enchytraeid communities. Increased intensity and frequency of drought had rather weak persistent effects on total enchytraeid abundance suggesting that ecosystem functions of enchytraeids may only be transiently impacted by repeated spring or summer drought. However, drought treatment had persistent negative effects on species richness and community structure across sites. Drought treated plots harboured only 35–65% of the species present in control plots, and the reduction of species richness was most pronounced at the driest sites. It is discussed that soil invertebrates, due to their weak migratory potential, may be more liable to extinction under changing climatic conditions than above-ground species, and therefore consequences of climate change to soil organisms need particular attention in future research.

AB - Studies of biological responses in the terrestrial environment to rapid changes in climate have mostly been concerned with above-ground biota, whereas less is known of belowground organisms. The present study focuses on enchytraeids (Oligochaeta) of heathland ecosystems and how the enchytraeid community has responded to simulated climate change in a long-term field experiment. Either increased temperature or repeated drought was applied for 13 years to field plots located in Wales, The Netherlands and Denmark representing a gradient in precipitation and annual temperature fluctuations thereby providing an opportunity to study biological responses on a local (within sites) and regional scale. Warming treatments increasing night-time temperature (0.5–1 °C higher than ambient at 5 cm soil depth) had no detectable effects on the enchytraeid communities. Increased intensity and frequency of drought had rather weak persistent effects on total enchytraeid abundance suggesting that ecosystem functions of enchytraeids may only be transiently impacted by repeated spring or summer drought. However, drought treatment had persistent negative effects on species richness and community structure across sites. Drought treated plots harboured only 35–65% of the species present in control plots, and the reduction of species richness was most pronounced at the driest sites. It is discussed that soil invertebrates, due to their weak migratory potential, may be more liable to extinction under changing climatic conditions than above-ground species, and therefore consequences of climate change to soil organisms need particular attention in future research.

U2 - 10.1016/j.soilbio.2012.05.001

DO - 10.1016/j.soilbio.2012.05.001

M3 - Journal article

VL - 53

SP - 43

EP - 49

JO - Soil Biology & Biochemistry

JF - Soil Biology & Biochemistry

SN - 0038-0717

ER -

ID: 44006914