Soil food web properties explain ecosystem services across European land use systems
University of Manchester · Lancaster University · +16 more institutions
Abstract
Intensive land use reduces the diversity and abundance of many soil biota, with consequences for the processes that they govern and the ecosystem services that these processes underpin. Relationships between soil biota and ecosystem processes have mostly been found in laboratory experiments and rarely are found in the field. Here, we quantified, across four countries of contrasting climatic and soil conditions in Europe, how differences in soil food web composition resulting from land use systems (intensive wheat rotation, extensive rotation, and permanent grassland) influence the functioning of soils and the ecosystem services that they deliver. Intensive wheat rotation consistently reduced the biomass of all…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 55.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 44
Authors
23- FTFranciska T. de VriesCorresponding
University of Manchester, Lancaster University
- ÉTÉlisa Thébault
AgroParisTech, Sorbonne Université, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Wageningen University & Research
- MLMira Liiri
University of Helsinki
- KBKlaus Birkhofer
Lund University
- MΑMaria Α. Tsiafouli
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Topics & keywords
- Soil food web
- Environmental science
- Soil biology
- Ecosystem services
- Biomass (ecology)
- Food web
- Ecosystem
- Land use