气候变化对蚯蚓的影响--综述。

Jaswinder Singh, Martin Schädler, Wilian Demetrio, George G Brown, Nico Eisenhauer
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摘要

气候变化会对陆地生态系统中地面和地下的生物产生大量影响。鉴于土壤中蕴含着巨大的生物多样性,而且土壤中的许多生态系统功能都受土壤生物的支配,因此土壤生物多样性的驱动因素受到了越来越多的关注。温度、降水、土壤湿度等各种气候因素,以及干旱和洪水等极端气候事件都会改变土壤中群落的组成和功能。蚯蚓是温带和热带气候土壤中重要的生态系统工程师,对许多生态系统服务起着至关重要的作用,包括分解、养分循环和作物产量。在此,我们回顾了已发表的有关气候变化对蚯蚓群落和活动影响的文献。总的来说,我们发现物种和生态群对气候变化的反应具有高度的特异性,这很可能导致未来生态系统中蚯蚓群落组成的改变。在土壤含水量足够高的情况下,蚯蚓的活动、丰度和生物量往往会随着温度的升高而增加,而干旱和洪水等极端气候则会产生有害影响。不断变化的气候条件可能会促进蚯蚓对高纬度和高海拔地区的入侵,而更干燥和更温暖的条件可能会限制蚯蚓在世界其他地区的表现。对现有信息的总结为预测未来蚯蚓的分布提供了第一个基准。它还揭示了全球变化的多重影响对蚯蚓的交互作用研究的不足,例如气候变化在不同土壤污染水平和不同生态系统类型中的潜在影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Climate change effects on earthworms - a review.

Climate change can have a plethora of effects on organisms above and below the ground in terrestrial ecosystems. Given the tremendous biodiversity in the soil and the many ecosystem functions governed by soil organisms, the drivers of soil biodiversity have received increasing attention. Various climatic factors like temperature, precipitation, soil moisture, as well as extreme climate events like drought and flood have been shown to alter the composition and functioning of communities in the soil. Earthworms are important ecosystem engineers in the soils of temperate and tropical climates and play crucial roles for many ecosystem services, including decomposition, nutrient cycling, and crop yield. Here, we review the published literature on climate change effects on earthworm communities and activity. In general, we find highly species- and ecological group-specific responses to climate change, which are likely to result in altered earthworm community composition in future ecosystems. Earthworm activity, abundance, and biomass tend to increase with increasing temperature at sufficiently high soil water content, while climate extremes like drought and flooding have deleterious effects. Changing climate conditions may facilitate the invasion of earthworms at higher latitudes and altitudes, while dryer and warmer conditions may limit earthworm performance in other regions of the world. The present summary of available information provides a first baseline for predictions of future earthworm distribution. It also reveals the shortage of studies on interacting effects of multiple global change effects on earthworms, such as potential context-dependent effects of climate change at different soil pollution levels and across ecosystem types.

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