Mesofauna in soils of the ivolga depression (Western Transbaikal region)

Mesofauna of chestnut, meadow-chestnut, meadow alluvial, clayey mucky-gley swampy alluvial soils, and hydromorphic solonchaks has been studied within the Ivolga depression. Variations in the population density of soil invertebrates (from 29.9 to 284.3 specimens per [m.sup.2]) are controlled by the p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Eurasian soil science 2007-08, Vol.40 (8), p.866-874
Hauptverfasser: Ubugunova, V. I., Lavrent’eva, I. N., Ubugunov, L. L., Nikheleeva, T. P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mesofauna of chestnut, meadow-chestnut, meadow alluvial, clayey mucky-gley swampy alluvial soils, and hydromorphic solonchaks has been studied within the Ivolga depression. Variations in the population density of soil invertebrates (from 29.9 to 284.3 specimens per [m.sup.2]) are controlled by the particular soil ecological conditions. Dominant mesofauna species are morphologically and physiologically adapted for living near the soil surface. About 85-90% of them are allocated to the uppermost 10-cm-thick soil layer. The hydrothermic regime (r = 0.94) and the low bioproductivity of phytocenoses (r = 0.74) are the major factors limiting the mesofauna functioning in soils of the Ivolga depression. The biocenotic similarity of the invertebrate complexes in the chestnut, meadow-chestnut, and solonchak soils and in the alluvial swampy and meadow soils is revealed. The highest diversity of the ecological groups of soil mesofauna is seen in the clayey mucky-gley swampy alluvial soils. DOI: 10.1134/S1064229307080091
ISSN:1064-2293
1556-195X
DOI:10.1134/S1064229307080091