Project Details
Effects of bioturbation on rates of vertical and horizontal sediment and nutrient fluxes
Applicants
Professor Dr. Jörg Bendix, since 1/2019; Professor Dr. Roland Brandl; Professorin Dr. Nina Farwig
Subject Area
Physical Geography
Term
from 2018 to 2023
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 408245331
Ground-dwelling animals act as ecosystem engineers that affect the structure and composition of the vegetation and thereby also ecosystem processes like soil formation, decomposition and carbon storage. Bioturbation has also links to the redistribution of solid and soluble particles and increases the patchiness of water and nutrient availability with consequences for plant assemblages and for soil organisms. However, most published studies on bioturbation have a local perspective and comprehensive, spatially explicit analyses of the influence of ground-dwelling organisms on rates of sediment and nutrient redistribution in the weathering zone and on hill slopes covering a broad climatic gradient are lacking. We thus aim to i) estimate the spatial distribution, abundance and functional type of the bioturbators in the EarthShape primary focus areas and along its climate gradient, ii) quantify the vegetation along this gradient and determine its relation to distribution and abundance of burrowing animals, iii) quantify effects of bioturbators on soil, nutrients and sediment redistribution, and iv) derive catchment-wide redistribution and erosion rates of the effects of bioturbators by using remote sensing and modelling techniques based on plot-derived transfer functions between climate, vegetation and abundance of species.
DFG Programme
Priority Programmes
Subproject of
SPP 1803:
EarthShape: Earth Surface Shaping by Biota
Ehemalige Antragstellerin
Dr. Annegret Larsen, until 1/2019