RELATIONSHIPS AT THE ABOVEGROUND–BELOWGROUND INTERFACE: PLANTS, SOIL BIOTA, AND SOIL PROCESSES.

Porazinska, Dorota L. and Bardgett, Richard D. and Blaauw, Maria B. and Hunt, H. William and Parsons, Andrew N. and Seastedt, Timothy R. and Wall, Diana H. (2003) RELATIONSHIPS AT THE ABOVEGROUND–BELOWGROUND INTERFACE: PLANTS, SOIL BIOTA, AND SOIL PROCESSES. Ecological Monographs, 73 (3). pp. 377-395. ISSN 0012-9615

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Abstract

Interactions at the aboveground–belowground interface provide important feedbacks that regulate ecosystem processes. Organisms within soil food webs are involved in processes of decomposition and nutrient mineralization, and their abundance and activity have been linked to plant ecophysiological traits such as species identity and the quality and quantity of plant tissue. We tested aboveground–belowground diversity relationships in a naturally developed plant community of native tallgrass prairie by taking soil samples from beneath naturally established grass tillers of chosen characteristics (e.g., homogeneous vs. heterogeneous plant combinations or C4 vs. C3 photosynthetic pathway) without imposing any disturbances to existing plant–soil relationships. The goal of this study was to elucidate the consequences, for soil microbiota (microflora phospholipid fatty acids, protozoa, and nematode functional groups) and for C and N mineralization, of plant community properties such as species richness, resource quality, resource heterogeneity, species identity, and presence of exotics. None of the biotic or abiotic soil variables was related to plant resource heterogeneity. Protozoa were not responsive to any of the plant community traits. Some bacterial and nematode groups were affected by plant characteristics specific to a particular plant species, but no uniform pattern emerged. Invasive and native plants generally were similar with respect to soil variables tested in this study. The lack of clear responses of soil variables to plant community traits indicates that idiosyncratic effects dominate both at the plant and soil biotic level and that generalized plant and soil diversity effects are hard to predict.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Ecological Monographs
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1100/1105
Subjects:
?? bacteriac mineralizationdiversityfunctional groupsnematodesnitrogen mineralizationphospholipid fatty acids (plfa)plant richnessprotozoaresource heterogeneityresource qualitysoil ecosystemecology, evolution, behavior and systematicsqh301 biology ??
ID Code:
10271
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
10 Jul 2008 15:46
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Jul 2024 09:13