4.5 Article

Northward range extension of an endemic soil decomposer with a distinct trophic position

Journal

BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 956-959

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2012.0537

Keywords

decomposers; ecological niche; soil carbon; soil macrofauna; species introductions

Funding

  1. Earth and Natural Sciences Doctoral Studies Programme
  2. Higher Education Authority through the Programme for Research at Third Level Institutions, Cycle 5
  3. European Regional Development Fund

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Ecological niche theory asserts that invading species become established only if introduced propagules survive stochastic mortality and can exploit resources unconsumed by resident species. Because their transportation is not controlled by plant health or biosecurity regulations, soil macrofauna decomposers, including earthworms are probably introduced frequently into non-native soils. Yet even with climatic change, exotic earthworm species from southern Europe have not been reported to become established in previously glaciated areas of northern Europe that already have trophically differentiated earthworm communities of 'peregrine' species. We discovered established populations of the earthworm Prosellodrilus amplisetosus (Lumbricidae), a member of a genus endemic to southern France, in six habitats of an urban farm in Dublin, Ireland, about 1000 km north of the genus's endemic range. Not only was P. amplisetosus the dominant endogeic (geophagous) earthworm species in two habitats, it also occupied a significantly different trophic position from the resident species, as evinced by stable isotope ratio analysis. The suggested ability of this non-native species to feed on and assimilate isotopically more enriched soil carbon (C) and nitrogen fractions that are inaccessible to resident species portends potential implications of decomposer range expansions for soil functioning including C sequestration.

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