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  • Climate change effects on s...
    Kardol, Paul; Reynolds, W. Nicholas; Norby, Richard J.; Classen, Aimée T.

    Applied soil ecology : a section of Agriculture, ecosystems & environment, January 2011, 2011, 2011-01-00, 20110101, 2011-01-01, Letnik: 47, Številka: 1
    Journal Article

    ▶ Taxon-specific responses to climate change result in shifts in community structure ▶ Multiple climate change factors interact in affecting soil microarthropod communities ▶ Changes in soil moisture content outweigh direct effects of temperature and CO2. Long-term ecosystem responses to climate change strongly depend on how the soil subsystem and its inhabitants respond to these perturbations. Using open-top chambers, we studied the response of soil microarthropods to single and combined effects of ambient and elevated atmospheric CO2, ambient and elevated temperatures and changes in precipitation in constructed old-fields in Tennessee, USA. Microarthropods were assessed five years after treatments were initiated and samples were collected in both November and June. Across treatments, mites and collembola were the most dominant microarthropod groups collected. We did not detect any treatment effects on microarthropod abundance. In November, but not in June, microarthropod richness, however, was affected by the climate change treatments. In November, total microarthropod richness was lower in dry than in wet treatments, and in ambient temperature treatments, richness was higher under elevated CO2 than under ambient CO2. Differential responses of individual taxa to the climate change treatments resulted in shifts in community composition. In general, the precipitation and warming treatments explained most of the variation in community composition. Across treatments, we found that collembola abundance and richness were positively related to soil moisture content, and that negative relationships between collembola abundance and richness and soil temperature could be explained by temperature-related shifts in soil moisture content. Our data demonstrate how simultaneously acting climate change factors can affect the structure of soil microarthropod communities in old-field ecosystems. Overall, changes in soil moisture content, either as direct effect of changes in precipitation or as indirect effect of warming or elevated CO2, had a larger impact on microarthropod communities than did the direct effects of the warming and elevated CO2 treatments. Moisture-induced shifts in soil microarthropod abundance and community composition may have important impacts on ecosystem functions, such as decomposition, under future climatic change.