Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4383156 | Applied Soil Ecology | 2008 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Soil nematodes were studied in 28 afforested sites on clay colliery spoil from opencast mining in the Czech Republic. The afforestations had four replicate sites and were represented by 20-33-year-old plantations of oak, alder, linden, spruce, larch, pine, and sites left to natural succession. The total abundance of nematodes in deciduous plantations plus natural successions was 1156 Ã 103 ind/m2 and in coniferous plantations 1236 Ã 103 ind/m2. The abundance of plant parasites and omnivores was significantly greater in deciduous than in coniferous plantations. The abundance of root-fungal feeders dominated by Filenchus was greater in spruce and pine plantations than in deciduous plantations. Bacterivorous Plectus predominated in larch plantations. Nematode assemblages in deciduous plantations had significantly greater numbers of species and genera, H'gen, MI, ΣMI, EI and SI values, and greater proportions of omnivores plus predators to other trophic groups than the assemblages in coniferous plantations. The nematode fauna indicated most advanced soil restoration on spoils under oak and alder plantations, intermediate under linden and spruce, and least under pine and larch. Nevertheless, some nematodes typical for developed forests were either found in low population densities (e.g. Teratocephalus) or were missing (e.g. Malenchus).
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Authors
Ladislav HánÄl,