Global monitoring of soil animal communities using a common methodology

Authors

  • Anton M. Potapov University of Goettingen; Russian Academy of Sciences
  • Xin Sun Institute of Urban Environment Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Andrew D. Barnes University of Waikato
  • Maria J. Briones Universidad de Vigo
  • George G. Brown Embrapa Forestry; Universidade Federal do Paraná
  • Erin K. Cameron Saint Mary’s University
  • Chih-Han Chang National Taiwan University; National Taiwan University
  • Jerome Cortet Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier
  • Nico Eisenhauer German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig; Leipzig University
  • Andre L.C. Franco Colorado State University
  • Saori Fujii Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute
  • Stefan Geisen Wageningen University & Research
  • Carlos Guerra German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), Halle-Jena-Leipzig; Martin Luther University Halle Wittenberg
  • Konstantin Gongalsky A.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences
  • Jari Haimi University of Jyväskylä
  • I. Tanya Handa Université du Québec à Montréal
  • Charlene Janion-Sheepers University of Cape Town; Iziko Museums of South Africa
  • Kamil Karaban Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University in Warsaw
  • Zoe Lindo University of Western Ontario
  • Jerome Mathieu Sorbonne Université
  • Maria Laura Moreno Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
  • Maka Murvanidze I. Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University
  • Uffe Nielsen Western Sydney University
  • Stefan Scheu University of Göttingen
  • Olaf Schmidt University College Dublin
  • Clement Schneider Senckenberg Society for Nature Research
  • Julia Seeber Eurac Research; University of Innsbruck
  • Maria Tsiafouli Aristotle University
  • Jiri Tuma Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences
  • Alexei Tiunov Russian Academy of Sciences
  • Andrey S. Zaytsev Russian Academy of Sciences
  • Frank Ashwood Forest Research, Northern Research Station
  • Mac Callaham USDA Forest Service
  • Diana Wall Colorado State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25674/so94iss1id178

Keywords:

biogeography, ecosystem functioning, macroecology, soil fauna, soil biodiversity

Abstract

Here we introduce the Soil BON Foodweb Team, a cross-continental collaborative network that aims to monitor soil animal communities and food webs using consistent methodology at a global scale. Soil animals support vital soil processes via soil structure modification, consumption of dead organic matter, and interactions with microbial and plant communities. Soil animal effects on ecosystem functions have been demonstrated by correlative analyses as well as in laboratory and field experiments, but these studies typically focus on selected animal groups or species at one or few sites with limited variation in environmental conditions. The lack of comprehensive harmonised large-scale soil animal community data including microfauna, mesofauna, and macrofauna, in conjunction with related soil functions, microbial communities, and vegetation, limits our understanding of biological interactions in soil systems and how these interactions affect ecosystem functioning. To provide such data, the Soil BON Foodweb Team invites researchers worldwide to use a common methodology to address six long-term goals: (1) to collect globally representative harmonised data on soil micro-, meso-, and macrofauna communities, (2) to describe key environmental drivers of soil animal communities and food webs, (3) to assess the efficiency of conservation approaches for the protection of soil animal communities, (4) to describe soil food webs and their association with soil functioning globally, (5) to establish a global research network for soil biodiversity monitoring and collaborative projects in related topics, (6) to reinforce local collaboration networks and expertise and support capacity building for soil animal research around the world. In this paper, we describe the vision of the global research network and the common sampling protocol to assess soil animal communities and advocate for the use of standard methodologies across observational and experimental soil animal studies. We will use this protocol to conduct soil animal assessments and reconstruct soil food webs at sites associated with the global soil biodiversity monitoring network, Soil BON, allowing us to assess linkages among soil biodiversity, vegetation, soil physico-chemical properties, climate, and ecosystem functions. In the present paper, we call for researchers especially from countries and ecoregions that remain underrepresented in the majority of soil biodiversity assessments to join us. Together we will be able to provide science-based evidence to support soil biodiversity conservation and functioning of terrestrial ecosystems.

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2022-04-01

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Potapov, A. M., Sun, X., Barnes, A. D., Briones, M. J., Brown, G. G., Cameron, E. K., Chang, C.-H., Cortet, J., Eisenhauer, N., Franco, A. L., Fujii, S., Geisen, S., Guerra, C., Gongalsky, K., Haimi, J., Handa, I. T., Janion-Sheepers, C., Karaban, K., Lindo, Z., … Wall, D. (2022). Global monitoring of soil animal communities using a common methodology. Soil Organisms, 94(1), 55–68. https://doi.org/10.25674/so94iss1id178

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