Literature DB >> 30306643

Amazonian deforestation and soil biodiversity.

André L C Franco1, Bruno W Sobral2, Artur L C Silva3, Diana H Wall4.   

Abstract

Clearance and perturbation of Amazonian forests are one of the greatest threats to tropical biodiversity conservation of our times. A better understanding of how soil communities respond to Amazonian deforestation is crucially needed to inform policy interventions that effectively protect biodiversity and the essential ecosystem services it provides. We assessed the impact of deforestation and ecosystem conversion to arable land on Amazonian soil biodiversity through a meta-analysis. We analyzed 274 pairwise comparisons of soil biodiversity in Amazonian primary forests and sites under different stages of deforestation and land-use conversion: disturbed (wildfire and selective logging) and slash-and-burnt forests, pastures, and cropping systems. Overall, 60% and 51% of responses of soil macrofauna and microbial community attributes (i.e., abundance, biomass, richness, and diversity indexes) to deforestation were negative, respectively. We found few studies on mesofauna (e.g., microarthropods) and microfauna (e.g., protozoa and nematodes), so those groups could not be analyzed. Macrofauna abundance and biomass were more vulnerable to the displacement of forests by pastures than by agricultural fields, whereas microbes showed the opposite pattern. Effects of Amazonian deforestation on macrofauna were more detrimental at sites with mean annual precipitation >1900 mm, and higher losses of microbes occurred in highly acidic soils (pH < 4.5). Limited geographic coverage, omission of meso- and microfauna, and low taxonomic resolution were main factors impairing generalizations from the data set. Few studies assessed the impacts of within-forest disturbance (wildfires and selective logging) on soil species in Amazonia, where logging operations rapidly expand across public lands and more frequent severe dry seasons are increasing the prevalence of wildfires.
© 2018 Society for Conservation Biology.

Keywords:  cambio de uso de suelo; fauna del suelo; land-use change; meta-analysis; meta-análisis; microorganismos; microorganisms; rainforest; selva; soil fauna; 土地利用变化, 土壤动物群, 微生物, 荟萃分析, 雨林

Year:  2019        PMID: 30306643     DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13234

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  4 in total

1.  Soil enzyme responses to land use change in the tropical rainforest of the Colombian Amazon region.

Authors:  Adriana M Silva-Olaya; Dúber A Mora-Motta; Maurício R Cherubin; Daniel Grados; Anil Somenahally; Fausto A Ortiz-Morea
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-08-18       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 2.  Unboxing the black box-one step forward to understand the soil microbiome: A systematic review.

Authors:  Apurva Mishra; Lal Singh; Dharmesh Singh
Journal:  Microb Ecol       Date:  2022-02-02       Impact factor: 4.552

Review 3.  Health impact of the Anthropocene: the complex relationship between gut microbiota, epigenetics, and human health, using obesity as an example.

Authors:  Cecilie Torp Austvoll; Valentina Gallo; Doreen Montag
Journal:  Glob Health Epidemiol Genom       Date:  2020-04-20

4.  A "Dirty" Footprint: Macroinvertebrate diversity in Amazonian Anthropic Soils.

Authors:  Wilian C Demetrio; Ana C Conrado; Agno N S Acioli; Alexandre C Ferreira; Marie L C Bartz; Samuel W James; Elodie da Silva; Lilianne S Maia; Gilvan C Martins; Rodrigo S Macedo; David W G Stanton; Patrick Lavelle; Elena Velasquez; Anne Zangerlé; Rafaella Barbosa; Sandra C Tapia-Coral; Aleksander W Muniz; Alessandra Santos; Talita Ferreira; Rodrigo F Segalla; Thibaud Decaëns; Herlon S Nadolny; Clara P Peña-Venegas; Cláudia M B F Maia; Amarildo Pasini; André F Mota; Paulo S Taube Júnior; Telma A C Silva; Lilian Rebellato; Raimundo C de Oliveira Júnior; Eduardo G Neves; Helena P Lima; Rodrigo M Feitosa; Pablo Vidal Torrado; Doyle McKey; Charles R Clement; Myrtle P Shock; Wenceslau G Teixeira; Antônio C V Motta; Vander F Melo; Jeferson Dieckow; Marilice C Garrastazu; Leda S Chubatsu; Peter Kille; George G Brown; Luís Cunha
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2021-07-10       Impact factor: 13.211

  4 in total

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