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Earthworm effects on soil biogeochemistry in temperate forests focusing on stable isotope tracing: a review

Journal

APPLIED BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 65, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER SINGAPORE PTE LTD
DOI: 10.1186/s13765-022-00758-y

Keywords

Earthworm; Temperate forest; Soil organic material (SOM); Carbon and nitrogen; Nutrient cycling; Stable isotope tracing

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This paper summarizes studies on the impact of earthworms on soil organic material dynamics in temperate forests. It focuses on the earthworm-induced modification of soil properties and the use of isotope tracing methods to understand carbon and nitrogen transformation and movements. The paper highlights the importance of the isotope method in quantifying organic materials and discusses other potential methodologies.
Earthworms (Oligochaeta) are globally distributed soil-dwelling invertebrates that alter soil properties through feeding, casting, and burrowing behaviors. Soil physicochemical modification, which may directly influence the availability and dynamics of organic and inorganic nutrients in the soil, such as carbon and nitrogen, includes soil texture, porosity, and pH. Temperate forests produce year-round plant litter, the primary food source for earthworms, and litter processed by earthworms significantly contributes to soil organic material storage. In recent decades, studies on temperate forest ecosystems have attempted to elucidate and quantify the earthworm impact on soil organic material dynamics, mainly targeting carbon and nitrogen, using isotope analysis methods. This paper summarizes studies on the following topics: (1) effect of earthworm modification on soil property to understand these alterations' interaction with carbon and nitrogen dynamics, and (2) isotope tracing method, used to elucidate the earthworm effect on carbon and nitrogen transformation and movements in temperate forests. The particular emphasis on the isotope method is based on its capability of time-adjusted quantification of organic materials in the ecosystem compartments. Also, isotopic labeling in biomass has a broad range of applications, such as tracing assimilated food sources, identifying trophic interactions in soil food webs, and addressing material dynamics in complex linkages between earthworms and their environment. In addition, we provide perspectives on other methodologies, such as chronology and population ecology, as feasible options to further assist the isotope tracing of earthworms' impact on soil nutrient dynamics.

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