Direct and indirect effects of climate change on soil microbial and soil microbial‐plant interactions: What lies ahead?
University of Copenhagen · Natural History Museum Aarhus · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Global change is altering species distributions and thus interactions among organisms. Organisms live in concert with thousands of other species, some beneficial, some pathogenic, some which have little to no effect in complex communities. Since natural communities are composed of organisms with very different life history traits and dispersal ability it is unlikely they will all respond to climatic change in a similar way. Disjuncts in plant‐pollinator and plant‐herbivore interactions under global change have been relatively well described, but plant‐soil microorganism and soil microbe‐microbe relationships have received less attention. Since soil microorganisms regulate nutrient transformations, provide…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 52.60
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 198
Authors
8- ATAimée T. ClassenCorresponding
University of Copenhagen, Natural History Museum Aarhus, University of Tennessee at Knoxville
- MKMaja K. Sundqvist
University of Copenhagen, Natural History Museum Aarhus, Umeå University
- JAJeremiah A. Henning
University of Tennessee at Knoxville
- GSGregory S. Newman
University of Copenhagen, Natural History Museum Aarhus
- JAJessica A. M. Moore
University of Tennessee at Knoxville
Topics & keywords
- Ecosystem
- Ecology
- Biological dispersal
- Global change
- Biology
- Climate change
- Herbivore
- Plant community