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Recovery of forest soil fauna diversity and composition after repeated summer droughts
Author(s) -
Lindberg Niklas,
Bengtsson Janne
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
oikos
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.672
H-Index - 179
eISSN - 1600-0706
pISSN - 0030-1299
DOI - 10.1111/j.2006.0030-1299.14396.x
Subject(s) - soil mesofauna , ecology , oribatida , species richness , soil biology , mesostigmata , abundance (ecology) , fauna , biology , disturbance (geology) , species diversity , biological dispersal , acari , soil water , paleontology , population , demography , sociology
To examine the resilience of soil animal communities to large‐scale disturbances. we studied the recovery of total abundance, diversity and community composition of forest soil mesofauna after a 6‐year climatic disturbance. This was done in a pre‐established experiment in a Norway spruce Picea abies stand in southern Sweden in which long‐term summer droughts had been experimentally imposed and had caused large changes in soil fauna communities. We included both predators (mesostigmatid mites) and fungivores/detritivores (oribatid mites, collembolans) in the study because of the likelihood that they would differ in recovery ability due to differences in their feeding habits, dispersal ability and reproductive strategies. Total abundances of Collembola, Oribatida and Mesostigmata were similar in recovery and control plots after three years, but species richness, the Shannon‐Wiener diversity index, and community composition recovered more slowly, particularly among the Oribatida. To only use total abundance of higher taxonomic groups was thus not sufficient when measuring community recovery. There was a tendency for more mobile groups to recover faster than the slow‐moving oribatids, indicating the importance of dispersal ability for the resilience of soil communities.