Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9446009 Biological Conservation 2005 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
While plant communities clearly developed towards the semi-natural references, there was less direction in succession of nematode taxa. The number of fungal feeding nematodes increased after land abandonment. Numbers of omni-carnivorous nematodes expanded only during the first years, after which there were no substantial changes for the next three decades. Plant communities on the ex-arable fields developed towards the theoretical reference plant associations Galio hercynici-Festucetum ovinae and Genisto anglicae-Callunetum. Nematode communities developed away from a theoretical community indicative of arable land, but there was no clear development towards a theoretical (semi-)natural reference. Our results show that restoration and conservation of plant communities is of limited indicative value for developments belowground: successful restoration of plant diversity does not necessarily imply successful restoration of belowground diversity. Assessing the impact of conservation measures on restoring soil biodiversity requires information on belowground community composition of (semi-)natural areas in order to establish proper references for restoration sites.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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