Division of Earth and Ecosystem Sciences, Desert Research Institute, 2215 Raggio Parkway, Reno, NV 89512, USA.
Oecologia. 2013 Mar;171(3):613-22. doi: 10.1007/s00442-012-2585-4. Epub 2013 Feb 8.
Earthworms are among the world's most important ecosystem engineers because of their effects on soil fertility and plant productivity. Their dependence on plants for carbon, however, means that any changes in plant community structure or function caused by rising atmospheric CO2 or loss of plant species diversity could affect earthworm activity, which may feed back on plant communities. Production of surface casts measured during three consecutive years in field experimental plots (n = 24, 1.2 m(2)) planted with local calcareous grassland species that varied in plant species richness (diversity levels: high, 31 species; medium, 12; low, 5) and were exposed to ambient (356 μl CO2 l(-1)) or elevated (600 μl CO2 l(-1)) CO2 was only consistently stimulated in high diversity plots exposed to elevated CO2 (+120 %, 31 spp: 603 ± 52 under ambient CO2 vs. 1,325 ± 204 g cast dwt. m(-2) year(-1) under elevated CO2 in 1996; +77 %, 940 ± 44 vs. 1,663 ± 204 g cast dwt. m(-2) year(-1) in 1998). Reductions in plant diversity had little effect on cast production in ecosystems maintained at ambient CO2, but the stimulatory effect of elevated CO2 on cast production disappeared when plant species diversity was decreased to 12 and 5 species. High diversity plots were also the only communities that included plant species that an earlier field study showed to be among the most responsive to elevated CO2 and to be most preferred by earthworms to deposit casts near. Further, the +87 % CO2-induced increase in cast production measured over the 3 years corresponded to a parallel increase in cumulative total nitrogen of 5.7 g N m(-2) and would help explain the large stimulation of aboveground plant biomass production observed in high-diversity communities under elevated CO2. The results of this study demonstrate how the loss of plant species from communities can alter responses of major soil heterotrophs and consequently ecosystem biogeochemistry.
由于对土壤肥力和植物生产力的影响,蚯蚓是世界上最重要的生态系统工程师之一。然而,它们对植物的碳依赖意味着,大气 CO2 升高或植物物种多样性丧失引起的植物群落结构或功能的任何变化都可能影响蚯蚓的活动,而蚯蚓的活动可能会对植物群落产生反馈。在田间实验小区(n = 24,1.2 m²)中,连续三年测量了地表蚓粪的产量,实验小区种植了当地的钙质草地物种,这些物种的物种丰富度不同(多样性水平:高,31 种;中,12 种;低,5 种),并暴露在环境(356 μl CO2 l(-1))或升高(600 μl CO2 l(-1)) CO2 下,只有在高多样性的暴露在升高 CO2 的实验小区中,蚓粪产量才持续受到刺激(增加 120%,31 种:在环境 CO2 下为 603 ± 52 g 风干重·m(-2)·年(-1),在升高 CO2 下为 1,325 ± 204 g 风干重·m(-2)·年(-1),在 1996 年;增加 77%,940 ± 44 vs. 1,663 ± 204 g 风干重·m(-2)·年(-1),在 1998 年)。在维持在环境 CO2 下的生态系统中,植物多样性的减少对蚓粪产量几乎没有影响,但当植物物种多样性减少到 12 种和 5 种时,升高 CO2 对蚓粪产量的刺激作用就消失了。高多样性的实验小区也是仅有的包括了早些时候田间研究表明对升高 CO2 反应最灵敏、最受蚯蚓欢迎、在靠近植物处排泄蚓粪的植物物种的群落。此外,3 年期间,CO2 诱导增加了 87%的蚓粪产量,这与累积总氮增加了 5.7 g N m(-2)相对应,这有助于解释在高多样性的群落中观察到的地上植物生物量生产的巨大刺激。这项研究的结果表明,群落中植物物种的丧失如何改变主要土壤异养生物的反应,从而改变生态系统生物地球化学。