Illuminating biodiversity changes in the ‘Black Box’

Soil is often described as a ‘black box’, as surprisingly little is known about the high levels of biodiversity that reside there. For aboveground organisms, we have good knowledge of the distribution of the species and how they might change under future human impacts. Yet despite the fact that soil...

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Main Authors: Helen Phillips, Erin Cameron, Nico Eisenhauer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2022-08-01
Series:Research Ideas and Outcomes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://riojournal.com/article/87143/download/pdf/
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author Helen Phillips
Erin Cameron
Nico Eisenhauer
author_facet Helen Phillips
Erin Cameron
Nico Eisenhauer
author_sort Helen Phillips
collection DOAJ
description Soil is often described as a ‘black box’, as surprisingly little is known about the high levels of biodiversity that reside there. For aboveground organisms, we have good knowledge of the distribution of the species and how they might change under future human impacts. Yet despite the fact that soil organisms provide a wide variety of ecosystem functions, we have very limited knowledge of their distribution and how their diversity might change in the future. In order to create accurate and generalisable models of biodiversity, the underlying data need to be representative of the entire globe. Yet even with our recently compiled global earthworm dataset of over 11000 sites, there are gaps across large regions. These gaps are consistent across many other datasets of both above- and belowground diversity. In order to fill the gaps we propose a sampling network (SoilFaUNa), to create a comprehensive database of soil macrofauna diversity and soil functions (e.g. decomposition rates). Building on the existing dataset of earthworm diversity and early data from the SoilFaUNa project, we will investigate changes in earthworm diversity. From our current work, we know that both climate and land use are main drivers in predicting earthworm diversity, but both will change under future scenarios and may alter ecosystem functions. We will, using space-for-time substitution models, estimate how earthworm diversity and their functions might change in the future, modelling earthworm diversity as a function of climate, land use and soil properties and predicting based on future scenarios. Previous studies of aboveground diversity changes over time using time-series analysis have found no-net-loss in richness, but analyses have criticisms. We aim to use time-series data on earthworms to move this debate forward, by using data and statistical methods that would address the criticisms, whilst increasing our knowledge on this understudied soil group. Field experiments and micro-/mesocosm experiments have been used to investigate the link between a number of soil organisms and ecosystem functions under few environmental conditions. Meta-analyses, which can produce generalisable results can only answer questions for which there are data. Thus, we have been lacking on information on the link between the entire community of soil fauna and ecosystem functions and impact of changes to the soil fauna community across environmental contexts. Using data collected from the SoilFaUNa project, we will, for the first time, synthesise globally distributed specifically-sampled data to model how changes in the community composition of soil macrofauna (due to changes in land use, climate or soil properties) impact the ecosystem functions in the soil.
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spelling doaj.art-70e48c5d47e04109b598da228876bc652023-01-18T21:09:13ZengPensoft PublishersResearch Ideas and Outcomes2367-71632022-08-01813510.3897/rio.8.e8714387143Illuminating biodiversity changes in the ‘Black Box’Helen Phillips0Erin Cameron1Nico Eisenhauer2Leipzig UniversitySaint Mary's UniversityLeipzig UniversitySoil is often described as a ‘black box’, as surprisingly little is known about the high levels of biodiversity that reside there. For aboveground organisms, we have good knowledge of the distribution of the species and how they might change under future human impacts. Yet despite the fact that soil organisms provide a wide variety of ecosystem functions, we have very limited knowledge of their distribution and how their diversity might change in the future. In order to create accurate and generalisable models of biodiversity, the underlying data need to be representative of the entire globe. Yet even with our recently compiled global earthworm dataset of over 11000 sites, there are gaps across large regions. These gaps are consistent across many other datasets of both above- and belowground diversity. In order to fill the gaps we propose a sampling network (SoilFaUNa), to create a comprehensive database of soil macrofauna diversity and soil functions (e.g. decomposition rates). Building on the existing dataset of earthworm diversity and early data from the SoilFaUNa project, we will investigate changes in earthworm diversity. From our current work, we know that both climate and land use are main drivers in predicting earthworm diversity, but both will change under future scenarios and may alter ecosystem functions. We will, using space-for-time substitution models, estimate how earthworm diversity and their functions might change in the future, modelling earthworm diversity as a function of climate, land use and soil properties and predicting based on future scenarios. Previous studies of aboveground diversity changes over time using time-series analysis have found no-net-loss in richness, but analyses have criticisms. We aim to use time-series data on earthworms to move this debate forward, by using data and statistical methods that would address the criticisms, whilst increasing our knowledge on this understudied soil group. Field experiments and micro-/mesocosm experiments have been used to investigate the link between a number of soil organisms and ecosystem functions under few environmental conditions. Meta-analyses, which can produce generalisable results can only answer questions for which there are data. Thus, we have been lacking on information on the link between the entire community of soil fauna and ecosystem functions and impact of changes to the soil fauna community across environmental contexts. Using data collected from the SoilFaUNa project, we will, for the first time, synthesise globally distributed specifically-sampled data to model how changes in the community composition of soil macrofauna (due to changes in land use, climate or soil properties) impact the ecosystem functions in the soil.https://riojournal.com/article/87143/download/pdf/earthwormssoil macrofaunasoil functionsecosy
spellingShingle Helen Phillips
Erin Cameron
Nico Eisenhauer
Illuminating biodiversity changes in the ‘Black Box’
Research Ideas and Outcomes
earthworms
soil macrofauna
soil functions
ecosy
title Illuminating biodiversity changes in the ‘Black Box’
title_full Illuminating biodiversity changes in the ‘Black Box’
title_fullStr Illuminating biodiversity changes in the ‘Black Box’
title_full_unstemmed Illuminating biodiversity changes in the ‘Black Box’
title_short Illuminating biodiversity changes in the ‘Black Box’
title_sort illuminating biodiversity changes in the black box
topic earthworms
soil macrofauna
soil functions
ecosy
url https://riojournal.com/article/87143/download/pdf/
work_keys_str_mv AT helenphillips illuminatingbiodiversitychangesintheblackbox
AT erincameron illuminatingbiodiversitychangesintheblackbox
AT nicoeisenhauer illuminatingbiodiversitychangesintheblackbox