作者
Anton Potapov,Carlos A. Guerra,Johan van den Hoogen,Anatoly Babenko,Bruno Cavalcante Bellini,M.P. Berg,Steven Loudon Chown,Louis Deharveng,Ľubomír Kováč,Natalia A. Kuznetsova,Jean‐François Ponge,Mikhail Potapov,David J. Russell,Douglas Alexandre,Juha M. Alatalo,Javier Ignacio Arbea Polite,Ipsa Bandyopadhyaya,Verónica Bernava,Stef Bokhorst,Thomas Bolger,Gabriela Castaño-Meneses,Matthieu Chauvat,Ting-Wen Chen,Mathilde Chomel,Aimée T. Classen,Jérôme Cortet,Peter Čuchta,Ana Manuela de la Pedrosa,Susana S. D. Ferreira,Cristina Fiera,Juliane Filser,Oscar Franken,Saori Fujii,Essivi Gagnon Koudji,Meixiang Gao,Benoît Gendreau-Berthiaume,Diego F. Gomez-Pamies,Michelle Greve,I. Tanya Handa,Charlène Heiniger,Martin Holmstrup,Pablo Homet,Mari Ivask,Charlene Janion‐Scheepers,Nico Eisenhauer,Sophie Joimel,Bruna Claudia S. Jorge,Edīte Juceviča,Olga Ferlian,Luís Carlos Iuñes de Oliveira Filho,Osmar Klauberg Filho,Dilmar Baretta,Eveline J. Krab,Annely Kuu,Estevam Cipriano Araújo de Lima,Dunmei Lin,Zoë Lindo,Amy Liu,Jing‐Zhong Lu,María José Luciáñez,Michael Thomas Marx,Matthew A. McCary,Maria A. Minor,Taizo Nakamori,Ilaria Negri,Raúl Ochoa‐Hueso,José G. Palacios-Vargas,Melanie M. Pollierer,Pascal Querner,Natália Raschmanová,Muhammad Imtiaz Rashid,Laura J. Raymond-Léonard,Laurent Rousseau,Ruslan A. Saifutdinov,Sandrine Salmon,Emma J. Sayer,Nicole Scheunemann,Cornelia Scholz,Julia Seeber,Yulia B. Shveenkova,Sophya Stebaeva,Maria Sterzyńska,Xin Sun,Winda Ika Susanti,А. А. Таскаева,Madhav P. Thakur,Maria A. Tsiafouli,Matthew S. Turnbull,Mthokozisi N. Twala,Alexei V. Uvarov,Lisa A. Venier,Lina A. Widenfalk,Bruna Raquel Winck,Dániel Winkler,Donghui Wu,Zhijing Xie,Rui Yin,Douglas Zeppelini,Thomas W. Crowther,Nico Eisenhauer
摘要
Abstract Soil life supports the functioning and biodiversity of terrestrial ecosystems. Springtails (Collembola) are among the most abundant soil arthropods regulating soil fertility and flow of energy through above- and belowground food webs. However, the global distribution of springtail diversity and density, and how these relate to energy fluxes remains unknown. Here, using a global dataset representing 2470 sites, we estimate the total soil springtail biomass at 27.5 megatons carbon, which is threefold higher than wild terrestrial vertebrates, and record peak densities up to 2 million individuals per square meter in the tundra. Despite a 20-fold biomass difference between the tundra and the tropics, springtail energy use (community metabolism) remains similar across the latitudinal gradient, owing to the changes in temperature with latitude. Neither springtail density nor community metabolism is predicted by local species richness, which is high in the tropics, but comparably high in some temperate forests and even tundra. Changes in springtail activity may emerge from latitudinal gradients in temperature, predation and resource limitation in soil communities. Contrasting relationships of biomass, diversity and activity of springtail communities with temperature suggest that climate warming will alter fundamental soil biodiversity metrics in different directions, potentially restructuring terrestrial food webs and affecting soil functioning.