11 research outputs found
Earthworms from soils developed after 80 years under tree monocultures at Holt Down, Hampshire, UK
Experimental research from the 1980s showed that tree species influenced soil development where stands of beech (Fagus sylvatica) and small-leaved lime (Tilia cordata) respectivey started to develop a podzolic soil and a brown forest soil after 50 years from near identical origins. Evidence of earthworms was reported but no detail provided. Current work re-examined these soils and a further adjacent spruce (Picea abies) plantation and specifically sampled for earthworms. Standard soil and litter measurements were made, and earthworms were collected by a combined digging and hand-sorting, plus vermifuge technique. The soil surface below lime was covered with Mercurialis perennis, but deep leaf litter was present below beech, with needle cover below spruce. Significantly more earthworms were present below lime, at a density of 29 mâ2, when compared with beech (<2 mâ2) with spruce intermediate (11 mâ2), with a significantly greater earthworm biomass below lime. Of 8 earthworm species collected, more than 70% were from below lime, including Aporrectodea longa, Lumbricus terrestris, A. caliginosa, Octolasion cyaneum and L. rubellus. Those below spruce were mainly Dendrobaena octaedra and only A. longa was found below beech. These observations, after 80 years of differential soil development below tree stands, clearly show continued interactive influences on soils of monoculture tree species with associated ecosystem engineering earthworms
Deep Ion Torrent sequencing identifies soil fungal community shifts after frequent prescribed fires in a southeastern US forest ecosystem
Prescribed burning is a common management tool to control fuel loads, ground vegetation, and facilitate desirable game species. We evaluated soil fungal community responses to long-term prescribed fire treatments in a loblolly pine forest on the Piedmont of Georgia and utilized deep Internal Transcribed Spacer Region 1 (ITS1) amplicon sequencing afforded by the recent Ion Torrent Personal Genome Machine (PGM). These deep sequence data (19,000+ reads per sample after subsampling) indicate that frequent fires (3 year fire interval) shift soil fungus communities whereas infrequent fires (6 year fire interval) permit system resetting to a state similar to that without prescribed fire. Furthermore, in nonmetric multidimensional scaling analyses, primarily ectomycorrhizal taxa were correlated with axes associated with long fire intervals whereas soil saprobes tended to be correlated with the frequent fire recurrence. We conclude that 1) multiplexed Ion Torrent PGM analyses allow deep cost effective sequencing of fungal communities, but may suffer from short read lengths and inconsistent sequence quality adjacent to the sequencing adaptor; 2) frequent prescribed fires elicit a shift in soil fungal communities; and, 3) such shifts do not occur when fire intervals are longer. Our results emphasize the general responsiveness of these forests to management, and the importance of fire return intervals in meeting management objectives
Action of earthworms on flint burial â a return to Darwinâs estate
For thirty years, from the early 1840s, Charles Darwin documented the disappearance of flints in the grounds of Down House in Kent, at a location originally known as the âStony Fieldâ. This site (Great Pucklands Meadow - GPM) was visited in 2007 and an experiment set up in this ungrazed grassland. Locally-sourced flints (either large - 12 cm, or small â 5 cm dia.) were deposited at two densities within sixteen 1 m2 plots in a randomised factorial design. The area selected was distant from public access routes and remained unmown throughout the duration here reported. Fixed point photographs were taken at the outset to enable later photogrammetric analysis. After 6 years, the site was re-examined. The flints had generally been incorporated into the soil. Photographs were re-taken, proportion of buried flints recorded and measurements made of burial depth from a quarter of each plot. Results showed that large flints were more deeply incorporated than smaller (p=0.025), but more of the latter were below the soil surface. A controlled laboratory experiment was also conducted using Aporrectodea longa (the dominant earthworm species in GPM) to assess effects of casting in the absence of other biota. Results suggested that this species has a major influence on flint burial through surface casting. Combined with a long term, but small scale collection of A. longa casts from an area close to GPM, all results were consistent with those provided by Darwin and showed that rate of flint burial was within the range 0.21-0.96 cm y-1
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Tools for monitoring and study of peregrine pheretimoid earthworms (Megascolecidae)
Peregrine pheretimoid earthworms, commonly known as jumping worms, are members of the family Megascolecidae that have become widely established outside of their native ranges. In many parts of the world this represents a second wave of earthworm invasions, following the introduction of peregrine European earthworms in the family Lumbricidae during the colonial era. Forest ecologists, turf managers, gardeners, and other land managers are concerned about the observed or presumed negative effects of jumping worms on invaded habitats. Although research on jumping worms has accelerated in recent decades, our understanding of their ecology remains limited. We compiled techniques useful to researchers working to fill voids in our understanding. Similar past efforts have focused on tools used to study common European species. Differences in life cycle, behavior, morphology, and physiology make it difficult to transfer experiences with European earthworms to pheretimoids. For example, the loss of reproductive features in many pheretimoid populations poses a challenge for identification, and techniques for individually tagging lumbricid earthworms have been less successful for megascolecids. The active and ongoing expansion of pheretimoid populations in many areas requires increased attention on distributed methods, such as citizen-science protocols, for detecting and tracking their expansion. Finally, the desire to limit populations of pheretimoids, including those invading gardens and other environments that might be successfully restored, has exposed the lack of options for targeted, effective control of unwanted earthworms. We identify opportunities to address these voids in our methodological tool kit and encourage the adaptation of techniques previously used in the study and management of other invasive animals
Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Soil Biology & Biochemistry
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/soilbio Rates of in situ carbon mineralization in relation to land-use, microbia
The second wave of earthworm invasions in North America: biology, environmental impacts, management and control of invasive jumping worms
The invasion of jumping worms, a small group of pheretimoid earthworm species from Asia, has increasingly become an ecological, environmental and conservation issue in forest ecosystems and urban-suburban landscapes around the world. Their presence is often noticed due to their high abundance, distinctive âjumpingâ behavior, and prominent granular casts on the soil surface. Although they are known to affect soil carbon dynamics and nutrient availability, no single paper has summarized their profound impacts on soil biodiversity, plant community, and animals of all trophic groups that rely on soil and the leaf litter layer for habitat, food, and shelter. In this study, we summarize the biology, invasion, and ecological impacts of invasive jumping worms across North America. We highlight potential impacts of this second wave of earthworm invasion, contrast them with the preceding European earthworm invasion in temperate forests in North America, and identify annual life cycle, reproductive and cocoon survival strategies, casting behavior and co-invasion dynamics as the key factors that contribute to their successful invasion and distinct ecological impacts. We then suggest potential management and control strategies for practitioners and policy makers, underscore the importance of coordinated community science projects in tracking the spread, and identify knowledge gaps that need to be addressed to understand and control the invasion