Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5516552 Soil Biology and Biochemistry 2016 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Soil food webs harbor a tremendous diversity of organisms.•Little is known about the functional role of soil food web diversity.•Our framework links hierarchical levels of food web diversity to processes and services.•Functional trait diversity is the most universally influential level of diversity.•Future research should manipulate diversity within and across levels of organization.

Soil food webs play a key role in the cycling of carbon and nutrients and in sustainably provisioning ecosystem services. Despite the tremendous diversity of organisms that soil food webs harbor, we still know surprisingly little about the role of biodiversity in influencing the processes and services provided by soil food webs. To guide future research in this area, we outline a conceptual framework linking hierarchical levels of soil biodiversity to ecosystem processes and services. Here, we distinguish among different hierarchical levels of diversity: trophic, functional, taxonomic and genetic diversity. We conclude that the levels of food web diversity that matter most vary with the processes or services considered, with functional trait diversity being the most universally influential level of diversity. Increased research emphasis on manipulating diversity across hierarchical levels of biodiversity organization, with an explicit focus on the functional role of the component species, is critical for enhancing our understanding of the role of soil food web diversity in driving ecosystem processes and services.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Soil Science