Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
School of Global Environmental Sustainability, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2017 Sep;23(9):3857-3868. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13675. Epub 2017 Mar 29.
The importance of herbivore-plant and soil biota-plant interactions in terrestrial ecosystems is amply recognized, but the effects of aboveground herbivores on soil biota remain challenging to predict. To find global patterns in belowground responses to vertebrate herbivores, we performed a meta-analysis of studies that had measured abundance or activity of soil organisms inside and outside field exclosures (areas that excluded herbivores). Responses were often controlled by climate, ecosystem type, and dominant herbivore identity. Soil microfauna and especially root-feeding nematodes were negatively affected by herbivores in subarctic sites. In arid ecosystems, herbivore presence tended to reduce microbial biomass and nitrogen mineralization. Herbivores decreased soil respiration in subarctic ecosystems and increased it in temperate ecosystems, but had no net effect on microbial biomass or nitrogen mineralization in those ecosystems. Responses of soil fauna, microbial biomass, and nitrogen mineralization shifted from neutral to negative with increasing herbivore body size. Responses of animal decomposers tended to switch from negative to positive with increasing precipitation, but also differed among taxa, for instance Oribatida responded negatively to herbivores, whereas Collembola did not. Our findings imply that losses and gains of aboveground herbivores will interact with climate and land use changes, inducing functional shifts in soil communities. To conceptualize the mechanisms behind our findings and link them with previous theoretical frameworks, we propose two complementary approaches to predict soil biological responses to vertebrate herbivores, one focused on an herbivore body size gradient, and the other on a climate severity gradient. Major research gaps were revealed, with tropical biomes, protists, and soil macrofauna being especially overlooked.
食草动物-植物和土壤生物群-植物相互作用在陆地生态系统中的重要性得到了充分的认识,但预测地上食草动物对土壤生物群的影响仍然具有挑战性。为了找到地下对脊椎动物食草动物反应的全球模式,我们对测量了野外围栏(排除食草动物的区域)内外土壤生物丰度或活性的研究进行了荟萃分析。反应通常受气候、生态系统类型和主要食草动物身份的控制。在亚北极地区,土壤微小动物,特别是取食根系的线虫,受到食草动物的负面影响。在干旱生态系统中,食草动物的存在往往会减少微生物生物量和氮矿化作用。食草动物减少了亚北极生态系统中的土壤呼吸作用,增加了温带生态系统中的土壤呼吸作用,但对这些生态系统中的微生物生物量或氮矿化作用没有净影响。随着食草动物体型的增大,土壤动物、微生物生物量和氮矿化作用的反应从中性变为负性。动物分解者的反应往往随着降水的增加而从负变正,但在不同类群之间也存在差异,例如食真菌螨类对食草动物的反应是负面的,而弹尾目昆虫则没有。我们的研究结果表明,地上食草动物的损失和收益将与气候和土地利用变化相互作用,导致土壤群落的功能发生转变。为了从机制上解释我们的发现,并将其与以前的理论框架联系起来,我们提出了两种互补的方法来预测脊椎动物食草动物对土壤生物的反应,一种方法侧重于食草动物体型梯度,另一种方法侧重于气候严重程度梯度。揭示了主要的研究差距,特别是热带生物群落、原生生物和土壤大型动物被严重忽视。