Eisenhauer Nico, Ferlian Olga, Craven Dylan, Hines Jes, Jochum Malte
German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.
Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany.
Res Ideas Outcomes. 2019 Apr 1;5. doi: 10.3897/rio.5.e34564.
Earth is experiencing a substantial loss of biodiversity at the global scale, while both species gains and losses are occurring at local and regional scales. The influence of these nonrandom changes in species distributions could profoundly affect the functioning of ecosystems and the essential services that they provide. However, few experimental tests have been conducted examining the influence of species invasions on ecosystem functioning. Even fewer have been conducted using invasive ecosystem engineers, which can have disproportionately strong influence on native ecosystems relative to their own biomass. The invasion of exotic earthworms is a prime example of an ecosystem engineer that is influencing many ecosystems around the world. In particular, European earthworm invasions of northern North American forests cause simultaneous species gains and losses with significant consequences for essential ecosystem processes like nutrient cycling and crucial services to humanity like soil erosion control and carbon sequestration. Exotic earthworms are expected to select for specific traits in communities of soil microorganisms (fast-growing bacteria species), soil fauna (promoting the bacterial energy channel), and plants (graminoids) through direct and indirect effects. This will accelerate some ecosystem processes and decelerate others, fundamentally altering how invaded forests function. This project aims to investigate ecosystem responses of northern North American forests to earthworm invasion. Using a novel, synthetic combination of field observations, field experiments, lab experiments, and meta-analyses, the proposed work will be the first systematic examination of earthworm effects on (1) plant communities and (2) soil food webs and processes. Further, (3) effects of a changing climate (warming and reduced summer precipitation) on earthworm performance will be investigated in a unique field experiment designed to predict the future spread and consequences of earthworm invasion in North America. By assessing the soil chemical and physical properties as well as the taxonomic (e.g., by the latest next-generation sequencing techniques) and functional composition of plant, soil microbial and animal communities and the processes they drive in four forests, work packages I-III take complementary approaches to derive a comprehensive and generalizable picture of how ecosystems change in response to earthworm invasion. Finally, in work package IV meta-analyses will be used to integrate the information from work packages I-III and existing literature to investigate if earthworms cause invasion waves, invasion meltdowns, habitat homogenization, and ecosystem state shifts. Global data will be synthesized to test if the relative magnitude of effects differs from place to place depending on the functional dissimilarity between native soil fauna and exotic earthworms. Moving from local to global scale, the present proposal examines the influence of earthworm invasions on biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships from an aboveground-belowground perspective in natural settings. This approach is highly innovative as it utilizes the invasion by exotic earthworms as an exciting model system that links invasion biology with trait-based community ecology, global change research, and ecosystem ecology, pioneering a new generation of biodiversity-ecosystem functioning research.
在全球范围内,地球正经历着生物多样性的大幅丧失,而在局部和区域尺度上,物种既有增加也有减少。这些物种分布的非随机变化的影响可能会深刻影响生态系统的功能以及它们所提供的基本服务。然而,很少有实验测试来检验物种入侵对生态系统功能的影响。使用入侵性生态系统工程师进行的测试更少,相对于自身生物量,入侵性生态系统工程师对本地生态系统可能具有不成比例的强大影响。外来蚯蚓的入侵就是生态系统工程师影响全球许多生态系统的一个主要例子。特别是,欧洲蚯蚓入侵北美北部森林会导致物种同时增加和减少,对诸如养分循环等基本生态系统过程以及对人类至关重要的服务(如控制土壤侵蚀和碳固存)产生重大影响。预计外来蚯蚓会通过直接和间接影响,在土壤微生物群落(快速生长的细菌物种)、土壤动物群落(促进细菌能量通道)和植物群落(禾本科植物)中选择特定性状。这将加速一些生态系统过程,减缓其他过程,从根本上改变被入侵森林的功能。该项目旨在研究北美北部森林对蚯蚓入侵的生态系统反应。通过将实地观察、野外实验、实验室实验和荟萃分析进行新颖的综合运用,拟开展的工作将首次系统地研究蚯蚓对(1)植物群落和(2)土壤食物网及过程的影响。此外,(3)在一项独特的野外实验中,将研究气候变化(变暖和夏季降水减少)对蚯蚓活动的影响,该实验旨在预测蚯蚓在北美未来的扩散及其后果。通过评估四种森林中的土壤化学和物理性质以及植物、土壤微生物和动物群落的分类组成(例如通过最新的下一代测序技术)和功能组成以及它们所驱动的过程,工作包I - III采用互补方法,以全面且可推广地描绘生态系统如何响应蚯蚓入侵而变化。最后,在工作包IV中,荟萃分析将用于整合工作包I - III的信息以及现有文献,以研究蚯蚓是否会引发入侵浪潮、入侵崩溃、栖息地同质化和生态系统状态转变。将综合全球数据,以测试影响的相对程度是否因本地土壤动物和外来蚯蚓之间的功能差异而因地而异。从局部到全球尺度,本提案从地上 - 地下视角,在自然环境中研究蚯蚓入侵对生物多样性 - 生态系统功能关系的影响。这种方法极具创新性,因为它利用外来蚯蚓的入侵作为一个令人兴奋的模型系统,将入侵生物学与基于性状的群落生态学、全球变化研究和生态系统生态学联系起来,开创了新一代生物多样性 - 生态系统功能研究。