Szlavecz Katalin, Chang Chih-Han, Bernard Michael J, Pitz Scott L, Xia Lijun, Ma Yini, McCormick Melissa K, Filley Timothy, Yarwood Stephanie A, Yesilonis Ian D, Csuzdi Csaba
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Department of Environmental Science and Technology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA.
Oecologia. 2018 Sep;188(1):237-250. doi: 10.1007/s00442-018-4205-4. Epub 2018 Jun 12.
In temperate deciduous forests of eastern USA, most earthworm communities are dominated by invasive species. Their structure and functional group composition have critical impacts on ecological properties and processes. However, the factors determining their community structure are still poorly understood, and little is known regarding their dynamics during forest succession and the mechanisms leading to these changes. Earthworm communities are usually assumed to be stable and driven by vegetation. In contrast, the importance of dispersal and ecological drift is seldom acknowledged. By analyzing a 19-year dataset collected from forest stands in eastern USA, we demonstrated that on a decadal timescale, earthworm community dynamics are shaped by the interplay of selection, dispersal, and ecological drift. We highlighted that forests at different successional stages have distinct earthworm species and functional groups as a result of environmental filtering through leaf litter quality. Specifically, young forests are characterized by soil-feeding species that rely on relatively fresh soil organic matter derived from fast-decomposing litter, whereas old forests are characterized by those feeding on highly processed soil organic matter derived from slow-decomposing litter. In addition, year-to-year species gains and losses are primarily driven by dispersal from regional to local species pools, and by local extinction resulted from competition and ecological drift. We concluded that with continued dispersal of European species and the recent "second wave" of earthworm invasion by Asian species from the surrounding landscape, earthworms at the investigated forests are well-established, and will remain as the major drivers of soil development for the foreseeable future.
在美国东部的温带落叶林中,大多数蚯蚓群落由入侵物种主导。它们的结构和功能群组成对生态特性和过程具有关键影响。然而,决定其群落结构的因素仍知之甚少,关于它们在森林演替过程中的动态以及导致这些变化的机制也所知甚少。蚯蚓群落通常被认为是稳定的且受植被驱动。相比之下,扩散和生态漂变的重要性很少得到认可。通过分析从美国东部森林林分收集的19年数据集,我们证明在十年时间尺度上,蚯蚓群落动态是由选择、扩散和生态漂变的相互作用塑造的。我们强调,由于通过凋落物质量进行的环境过滤,不同演替阶段的森林具有不同的蚯蚓物种和功能群。具体而言,幼林的特征是土壤取食物种,它们依赖于来自快速分解凋落物的相对新鲜的土壤有机质,而老林的特征是那些以来自缓慢分解凋落物的高度加工土壤有机质为食的物种。此外,年际物种的增加和减少主要由从区域物种库到本地物种库的扩散以及竞争和生态漂变导致的本地灭绝驱动。我们得出结论,随着欧洲物种的持续扩散以及近期亚洲物种从周边景观对蚯蚓的“第二次入侵浪潮”,被调查森林中的蚯蚓已稳固立足,并且在可预见的未来仍将是土壤发育的主要驱动因素。