Soil biodiversity and carbon cycling : a review and synthesis of studies examining diversity-function relationships

Uffe N. Nielsen, Edward Ayres, Diana H. Wall, Richard D. Bardgett

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

    445 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Biodiversity and carbon (C) cycling have been the focus of much research in recent decades, partly because both change as a result of anthropogenic activities that are likely to continue. Soils are extremely species-rich and store approximately 80% of global terrestrial C. Soil organisms play a key role in C dynamics and a loss of species through global changes could influence global C dynamics. Here, we synthesize findings from published studies that have manipulated soil species richness and measured the response in terms of ecosystem functions related to C cycling (such as decomposition, respiration and the abundance or biomass of decomposer biota) to evaluate the impact of biodiversity loss on C dynamics. We grouped studies where one or more biotic groups had been manipulated to include a richness of ≤10 species or >10 species in order to reflect 'low' and 'high' extents of diversity manipulations. There was a positive relationship between species richness and C cycling in 77-100% of low-diversity experiments, even when the richness of just one biotic group was manipulated, whereas positive relationships occurred less frequently in studies with greater richness (35-64%). Moreover, when positive relationships were observed, these often indicated functional redundancy at low extents of diversity or that community composition had a stronger influence on C cycling than did species richness. Initial reductions in soil species richness resulting from global changes are unlikely to alter C dynamics significantly unless particularly influential species are lost. However, changes in community composition, and the loss of species with an ability to facilitate specialized soil processes related to C cycling, as a result of global changes, may have larger impacts on C dynamics.
    Original languageEnglish
    Number of pages12
    JournalEuropean Journal of Soil Science
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2011

    Keywords

    • C dynamics
    • biodiversity
    • carbon cycling
    • global change
    • soil organisms
    • soil species

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Soil biodiversity and carbon cycling : a review and synthesis of studies examining diversity-function relationships'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this