4.6 Article

Beech leaf degradation in laboratory experiments:: Effects of eight detritivorous invertebrate species

Journal

APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 2, Pages 291-301

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsoil.2006.08.002

Keywords

litter transformers; idiosynciasy; functional classification; earthworms; diplopods; isopods

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This work addresses the impact of eight detritivorous species of soil macro-invertebrates (three millipedes, two woodlice and three earthworms) on short-term carbon mineralization and mechanical breakdown of beech leaves. The production rate, size class distribution and OM content of invertebrate faeces were also measured. Hierarchical clustering (HQ and multivariate analysis were performed to find relevant functional groups among the species studied. Our results identified three groups of macro-invertebrates on the basis of their impacts on beach leaf degradation (hierarchical clustering): (1) invertebrates that produce fresh faeces with high N contents compared with other species (i.e. polydesmidae and a single species of lumbricidae); (2) other lumbricidae that fragment litter into fine particles in their faeces and actively stimulate CO2 release; (3) other arthropods that fragment litter into coarse particles and have weak impacts on OM mineralization. These groups over-ride taxonomy, and are proposed as a tentative functional classification of litter dwelling invertebrates. On the other hand, an idiosyncratic impact of species was observed in each group, highlighting how much empirical data are still needed to propose a robust functional classification of litter invertebrates. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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