| Literature DB >> 31206913 |
Guille Peguero1,2, Daniel Sol3,4, Miquel Arnedo5, Henning Petersen6, Sandrine Salmon7, Jean-François Ponge7, Joan Maspons3, Bridget Emmett8, Claus Beier9, Inger K Schmidt9, Albert Tietema10, Paolo De Angelis11, Edit Kovács-Láng12, György Kröel-Dulay12, Marc Estiarte2,3, Mireia Bartrons2,13, Martin Holmstrup14,15, Ivan A Janssens1, Josep Peñuelas2,3.
Abstract
Soil fauna play a fundamental role on key ecosystem functions like organic matter decomposition, although how local assemblages are responding to climate change and whether these changes may have consequences to ecosystem functioning is less clear. Previous studies have revealed that a continued environmental stress may result in poorer communities by filtering out the most sensitive species. However, these experiments have rarely been applied to climate change factors combining multiyear and multisite standardized field treatments across climatically contrasting regions, which has limited drawing general conclusions. Moreover, other facets of biodiversity, such as functional and phylogenetic diversity, potentially more closely linked to ecosystem functioning, have been largely neglected. Here, we report that the abundance, species richness, phylogenetic diversity, and functional richness of springtails (Subclass Collembola), a major group of fungivores and detritivores, decreased within 4 years of experimental drought across six European shrublands. The loss of phylogenetic and functional richness was higher than expected by the loss of species richness, leading to communities of phylogenetically similar species sharing evolutionary conserved traits. Additionally, despite the great climatic differences among study sites, we found that taxonomic, phylogenetic, and functional richness of springtail communities alone were able to explain up to 30% of the variation in annual decomposition rates. Altogether, our results suggest that the forecasted reductions in precipitation associated with climate change may erode springtail communities and likely other drought-sensitive soil invertebrates, thereby retarding litter decomposition and nutrient cycling in ecosystems.Keywords: Collembola; biodiversity-ecosystem functioning; climate change; drought; litter decomposition; shrublands; soil fauna
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31206913 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14685
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863