Macroinvertebrates in North American tallgrass prairie soils: effects of fire, mowing, and fertilization on density and biomass

The responses of tallgrass prairie plant communities and ecosystem processes to fire and grazing are well characterized. However, responses of invertebrate consumer groups, and particularly soil-dwelling organisms, to these disturbances are not well known. At Konza Prairie Biological Station, we sam...

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Veröffentlicht in:Soil biology & biochemistry 2003-08, Vol.35 (8), p.1079-1093
Hauptverfasser: Callaham, M.A., Blair, J.M., Todd, T.C., Kitchen, D.J., Whiles, M.R.
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container_issue 8
container_start_page 1079
container_title Soil biology & biochemistry
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creator Callaham, M.A.
Blair, J.M.
Todd, T.C.
Kitchen, D.J.
Whiles, M.R.
description The responses of tallgrass prairie plant communities and ecosystem processes to fire and grazing are well characterized. However, responses of invertebrate consumer groups, and particularly soil-dwelling organisms, to these disturbances are not well known. At Konza Prairie Biological Station, we sampled soil macroinvertebrates in 1994 and 1999 as part of a long-term experiment designed to examine the effects and interactions of annual fire, mowing, and fertilization (N and P) on prairie soil communities and processes. For nearly all taxa, in both years, responses were characterized by significant treatment interactions, but some general patterns were evident. Introduced European earthworms ( Aporrectodea spp. and Octolasion spp.) were most abundant in plots where fire was excluded, and the proportion of the total earthworm community consisting of introduced earthworms was greater in unburned, unmowed, and fertilized plots. Nymphs of two Cicada genera were collected ( Cicadetta spp. and Tibicen spp.). Cicadetta nymphs were more abundant in burned plots, but mowing reduced their abundance. Tibicen nymphs were collected almost exclusively from unburned plots. Treatment effects on herbivorous beetle larvae (Scarabaeidae, Elateridae, and Curculionidae) were variable, but nutrient additions (N or P) usually resulted in greater densities, whereas mowing usually resulted in lower densities. Our results suggest that departures from historical disturbance regimes (i.e. frequent fire and grazing) may render soils more susceptible to increased numbers of European earthworms, and that interactions between fire, aboveground biomass removal, and vegetation responses affect the structure and composition of invertebrate communities in tallgrass prairie soils.
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ispartof Soil biology & biochemistry, 2003-08, Vol.35 (8), p.1079-1093
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Agronomy. Soil science and plant productions
Biochemistry and biology
Biological and medical sciences
Biomass
Chemical, physicochemical, biochemical and biological properties
Cicadidae
Curculionidae
Disturbance
Earthworms
Elateridae
Fertilization
Fertilizer
Fire
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Grassland
Insect herbivores
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Physics, chemistry, biochemistry and biology of agricultural and forest soils
Scarabaeidae
Soil science
Zoology (interactions between soil fauna and agricultural or forest soils)
title Macroinvertebrates in North American tallgrass prairie soils: effects of fire, mowing, and fertilization on density and biomass
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