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Global mismatches in aboveground and belowground biodiversity
Author(s) -
Cameron Erin K.,
Martins Inês S.,
Lavelle Patrick,
Mathieu Jérôme,
Tedersoo Leho,
Bahram Mohammad,
Gottschall Felix,
Guerra Carlos A.,
Hines Jes,
Patoine Guillaume,
Siebert Julia,
Winter Marten,
Cesarz Simone,
Ferlian Olga,
Kreft Holger,
Lovejoy Thomas E.,
Montanarella Luca,
Orgiazzi Alberto,
Pereira Henrique M.,
Phillips Helen R. P.,
Settele Josef,
Wall Diana H.,
Eisenhauer Nico
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
conservation biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.2
H-Index - 222
eISSN - 1523-1739
pISSN - 0888-8892
DOI - 10.1111/cobi.13311
Subject(s) - biodiversity , biome , measurement of biodiversity , soil biodiversity , ecosystem , global biodiversity , environmental science , agroforestry , species richness , ecology , geography , biology , soil water , soil organic matter , biodiversity conservation
Human activities are accelerating global biodiversity change and have resulted in severely threatened ecosystem services. A large proportion of terrestrial biodiversity is harbored by soil, but soil biodiversity has been omitted from many global biodiversity assessments and conservation actions, and understanding of global patterns of soil biodiversity remains limited. In particular, the extent to which hotspots and coldspots of aboveground and soil biodiversity overlap is not clear. We examined global patterns of these overlaps by mapping indices of aboveground (mammals, birds, amphibians, vascular plants) and soil (bacteria, fungi, macrofauna) biodiversity that we created using previously published data on species richness. Areas of mismatch between aboveground and soil biodiversity covered 27% of Earth's terrestrial surface. The temperate broadleaf and mixed forests biome had the highest proportion of grid cells with high aboveground biodiversity but low soil biodiversity, whereas the boreal and tundra biomes had intermediate soil biodiversity but low aboveground biodiversity. While more data on soil biodiversity are needed, both to cover geographic gaps and to include additional taxa, our results suggest that protecting aboveground biodiversity may not sufficiently reduce threats to soil biodiversity. Given the functional importance of soil biodiversity and the role of soils in human well‐being, soil biodiversity should be considered further in policy agendas and conservation actions by adapting management practices to sustain soil biodiversity and considering soil biodiversity when designing protected areas.