0000000000445163

AUTHOR

Pekka Sulkava

Effects of hard frost and freeze-thaw cycles on decomposer communities and N mineralisation in boreal forest soil

Abstract Decomposition and mineralisation rates generally increase with increasing moisture and temperature. The expected global climate change may enhance precipitation and raise the temperatures at boreal latitudes, but absence of snow together with occasional low temperatures may cause disturbances in soil processes and faunal communities. To test the effects of disturbances such as hard frosts and freeze-thaw cycles on decomposer populations and N mineralisation, we performed two experiments. In the field experiment, carried out in a pine forest, we induced low soil temperatures by preventing snow covering the ground. In the laboratory test we established three “winter” temperature regi…

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Interactions between enchytraeid (Cognettia sphagnetorum), microarthropod and nematode populations in forest soil at different moistures

Abstract Very little is known about the effects of microclimatic conditions on interactions within soil faunal communities. The aim of the experiment was to examine how the different functional components of the faunal community in coniferous forest soil affect each other at different moisture levels. Forest humus was defaunated by heating, adjusted to three water contents, distributed into glass jars and reinoculated with microflora and microfauna. Sets of 10 jars were inoculated with (1) Cognettia sphagnetorum, (2) Cognettia with Folsomia candida (Collembola), (3) Cognettia with a mixed community of microarthropods, (4) Folsomia alone, (5) mixed microarthropods alone, and (6) Cognettia wi…

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Effects of isolation, area and predators on invasion: A field experiment with artificial islands

Abstract The three most important ecological factors affecting the success of island invasions are the area of the island, isolation of the island and occurrence of predators on the island. Traditionally, invasion success has been studied on natural islands, which partly explains the rarity of controlled and replicated experiments. Here we report results from a field experiment investigating the influence of the above three factors in artificial islands. As an experimental system, we used predatory mites and a nematode community occurring naturally in boreal coniferous forests. We found that all three factors had an effect on invasion success, but surprisingly, that there were no interactio…

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Habitat patchiness affects decomposition and faunal diversity: a microcosm experiment on forest floor.

Environmental heterogeneity has been intensively studied, but little is known about relationships between habitat patchiness and soil processes. The aim of this study was to investigate (1) the impact of patchiness of the litter layer on the decomposer community and litter decomposition rate, and (2) whether the impact of soil fauna on the rates of processes differs in relation to patchiness. An experiment was carried out in microcosms with coniferous forest humus and four kinds of litter with different C:N ratios or stages of decomposition, either separately (i.e. in patches) or mixed with each other. Microarthropod species diversity was better maintained in the patchy systems. In the abse…

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Decomposer communities in contaminated soil: Is altered community regulation a proper tool in ecological risk assessment of toxicants?

Abstract Effects of patchy soil contamination on decomposer organisms, their community regulation and nutrient mineralization were studied in a microcosm experiment. Coniferous forest soil was patchily contaminated with three concentrations of sodiumpentachlorophenate PCP (0, 50 and 500 mg PCP kg−1 of dry soil). Abundance of microbes, enchytraeids, nematodes, small oribatids and predatory mites were reduced by the PCP. Direct toxicity of PCP and lowered microbial biomass seemed to affect animal community composition in the most contaminated patches. Some large oribatids which seemed to be tolerant to PCP increased their numbers in the most contaminated patches. Although predatory mites suff…

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