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Projekt Druckansicht

Bodentiergemeinschaften als Indikatoren für Änderungen der Struktur und Funktion von Anden-Ökosystemen mit der Höhe und mit Nährstoffeinträgen

Fachliche Zuordnung Biochemie und Physiologie der Tiere
Ökologie und Biodiversität der Pflanzen und Ökosysteme
Förderung Förderung von 2014 bis 2017
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 244586183
 
Erstellungsjahr 2020

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

Investigating soil animal communities in tropical montane rainforests is of outstanding importance to better understand the functioning of tropical montane rainforests in face of global changes such as increased nutrient input and climate change. Since decomposer communities are exceptionally complex it is necessary to develop indicators which allow predicting changes in the functioning of the decomposer system. We investigated the effect of moderate nutrient addition, (NUMEX – nutrient manipulation experiment) and mycorrhizal fungi on soil microorganisms and soil invertebrates. Further, we investigated the phylogeny of tropical oribatid mites and methods for delineating species in tropical soil living testate amoebae. Nutrient addition increased the quality of the litter material and beneficially affected microbial communities thereby increasing decomposition rates. The results indicate that microorganisms are generally limited by nitrogen, but saprotrophic fungi also by phosphorus. Nutrient additions also strongly altered the community structure of testate amoebae. Testate amoebae benefited from the addition of nitrogen, but were detrimentally affected by phosphorus. The results suggests that testate amoeba communities are predominantly structured by abiotic factors and by antagonistic interactions with other microorganisms rather than by the availability of prey. Mycorrhizal fungi competed with other microorganisms and collembola benefitted from a reduction in mycorrhizal fungi whereas oribatid mites depended on root-/mycorrhiza-derived resources. Further, the results suggest that root-/mycorrhiza-derived resources are important for fuelling soil food webs, but that these resources are only available close to the roots and not channelled distant to roots via AMF. This indicates that in tropical rainforests the effect of root derived resources is limited to the close vicinity of roots, whereas in temperate forest root exudates are also available distant to the root system due to extraradical mycorrhizal hyphae. Abundance of microbial decomposers decreased significantly with increasing plant litter diversity, indicating that the interaction among litter types in mixtures facilitates the translocation of considerable amounts of secondary compounds resulting in a negative complementarity effect in leaf litter mixtures. The presence of low-quality leaf litter species enhanced the abundance of Oribatida and Collembola indicating that structurally more complex leaf litter appears to improve microhabitat conditions for the soil microarthropod community. Litter mixture effects have a strong impact on microbial decomposers, but individual litter features appear to be more important drivers of microarthropods abundance. Decomposition rates and soil fauna community structure were mainly influenced by the decompositional stage of the litter material and the surrounding environmental factors at different altitudes than by the initial quality and type of the litter material. Decompositional processes in could be separated into three phases characterised by the speed of decomposition as well as shifts in microbial biomass, soil fauna abundance and diversity and community structure of oribatid mites. This indicates that litter quality is not the main force structuring the tropical soil microarthropod community and that the relative importance of litter (leaf and root litter) and belowground plant derived resources (root exudates and mycorrhizal hyphae) shifts over the course of decomposition. Further, molecular analyses allowed to better understand the evolution and radiation of tropical soil animals. The results suggest that the high diversity of oribatid mites in tropical regions is based on the radiation of phylogenetically young lineages, supporting the hypothesis that the tropics function as cradle rather than museum of oribatid mite diversity. The results support the view that oribatid mites are a very old taxon which radiated intensively in tropical regions, their origin, however, predates the existence of tropical rainforests. To identify characters for morphology-based species delineation we investigated variations in shell size, pseudostome diameter and pseudostome form in Trigonopyxis arcula (testate amoebae) from three different sites of the Ecuadorian Andes. The results suggest that shell size is not an appropriate character for taxon delineation, but needs to be combined with other characters such as pseudostome form. Overall, the project provided novel insight into the morphological variability of the genus Trigonopyxis. Future studies need to combine morphological and phylogenetic approaches, but considerable further work is necessary for establishing the relevant molecular markers for these studies.

Projektbezogene Publikationen (Auswahl)

 
 

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