4.6 Article

Multifunctionality of belowground food webs: resource, size and spatial energy channels

Journal

BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 97, Issue 4, Pages 1691-1711

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12857

Keywords

soil food web; energy flux; network analysis; omnivory; functional traits; predator-prey interactions; feeding preferences; trophic guilds; ecosystem functioning; trophic multifunctionality

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [192626868 - SFB 990, CRC990 - EFForTS]
  2. Czech Academy of Sciences (CAS) [57448388]
  3. Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD) [CRC990]
  4. Alexander von Humboldt foundation [1071297-RUS-IP]

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This study reconstructs a food web that covers soil-associated consumers of different size classes based on generic food-web organization principles and multifunctional classification. Weighted trophic interactions among trophic guilds are inferred to calculate energy fluxes and propose indicators related to stability, biodiversity, and ecosystem-level functions. The multichannel reconstruction approach can assess trophic multifunctionality and compare it across communities and ecosystems.
The belowground compartment of terrestrial ecosystems drives nutrient cycling, the decomposition and stabilisation of organic matter, and supports aboveground life. Belowground consumers create complex food webs that regulate functioning, ensure stability and support biodiversity both below and above ground. However, existing soil food-web reconstructions do not match recently accumulated empirical evidence and there is no comprehensive reproducible approach that accounts for the complex resource, size and spatial structure of food webs in soil. Here I build on generic food-web organisation principles and use multifunctional classification of soil protists, invertebrates and vertebrates, to reconstruct a 'multichannel' food web across size classes of soil-associated consumers. I infer weighted trophic interactions among trophic guilds using feeding preferences and prey protection traits (evolutionarily inherited traits), size and spatial distributions (niche overlaps), and biomass-dependent feeding. I then use food-web reconstruction, together with assimilation efficiencies, to calculate energy fluxes assuming a steady-state energetic system. Based on energy fluxes, I propose a number of indicators, related to stability, biodiversity and multiple ecosystem-level functions such as herbivory, top-down control, translocation and transformation of organic matter. I illustrate this approach with an empirical example, comparing it with traditional resource-focused soil food-web reconstruction. The multichannel reconstruction can be used to assess 'trophic multifunctionality' (analogous to ecosystem multifunctionality), i.e. simultaneous support of multiple trophic functions by the food web, and compare it across communities and ecosystems spanning beyond the soil. With further empirical validation of the proposed functional indicators, this multichannel reconstruction approach could provide an effective tool for understanding animal diversity-ecosystem functioning relationships in soil. This tool hopefully will inspire more researchers to describe soil communities and belowground-aboveground interactions comprehensively. Such studies will provide informative indicators for including consumers as active agents in biogeochemical models, not only locally but also on regional and global scales.

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