Responses of soil fauna communities to the individual and combined effects of multiple global change factors

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Documents

  • Yan Peng
  • Josep Peñuelas
  • Vesterdal, Lars
  • Kai Yue
  • Guille Peguero
  • Dario A. Fornara
  • Petr Heděnec
  • Christina Steffens
  • Fuzhong Wu

Soil fauna plays a key role in regulating biogeochemical cycles, but how multiple global change factors (GCFs) may affect faunal communities remains poorly studied. We conducted a meta-analysis using 1154 observations to evaluate the individual and combined effects of elevated CO2, nitrogen (N) addition, warming, increased rainfall and drought on soil fauna density and diversity. Here we show that, overall, individual and combined effects of GCFs had negligible effects on soil fauna density and diversity, except that density was negatively affected by drought (−27.4%) and positively affected by increased rainfall individually (+24.9%) and in combination with N addition (+67.3%) or warming (+70.4%). GCF effects varied among taxonomic groups both in magnitude and direction. Variables such as latitude, elevation and experimental setting significantly impacted both individual and combined effects. Our results suggest that soil fauna density is affected by changed rainfall regimes, while diversity is resistant against individual and combined effects of multiple GCFs.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEcology Letters
Volume25
Issue number9
Pages (from-to)1961-1973
Number of pages12
ISSN1461-0248
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

    Research areas

  • changed rainfall, combined effects, elevated CO, individual effects, meta-analysis, nitrogen addition, soil biota, warming

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