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Journal ArticleDOI

Soil Organisms as Components of Ecosystems

Francis E. Clark
- 01 Oct 1978 - 
- Vol. 7, Iss: 4, pp 603-603
TLDR
The 6th International Soil Zoology Colloquium held in Uppsala in June 1976 as mentioned in this paper focused on the interactions of plant roots, microorganisms, and soil animals.
Abstract
This book is the Proceedings of the 6th International Soil Zoology Colloquium held in Uppsala in June 1976. The major theme is the interactions of plant roots, microorganisms, and soil animals. Four subthemes were chosen for the plenary sessions. These were: (i) Community structure and niche separation; (ii) The role of soil organisms in nutrient cycling; (iii) Plant roots in the soil system; and (iv) Models of soil organisms and their environment. In addition tothe 51 papers (14, 16, 13, and 8) presented in the above sessions, there are summarized versions of 41 papers given in poster session. The individual papers range from excellent to poor, with about one-fourth in the poor category. About half the remainder are autecological in subject matter treatment and lack the perspective promised in the colloquium title. Most of the papers in the first plenary session are on niche exploitation and responses by members of the soil fauna rather than on their roles as ecosystem components. The papers on nutrient cycling are, with few exceptions, excellent contributions. Particularly commendable is the comprehensive discussion offered by D. E. Reichle. The bulk of the papers in the third session concern either the activities or the effects on plants of rhizophagic invertebrates. Good discussions are given by Vancura and associates on quantitative aspects of root exudation and by Sihanonth and Todd on transfer of nutrients by ectomycorrhizal fungi. Readers expecting to find any noteworthy array of simulation models on soil organisms will be disappointed. Most of the papers in this session might have been placed just as appropriately in some other session. The closing session address by J. E. Satchell is thought-provoking as well asentertaining. The reader, while being told that earthworms are the trombones of the grave, gains the impression that as a group, the soil zoologists are alive and well. Mechanistically the book is soft cover and generally excellently edited. There are about 200 illustrations, mostly line graphs and histograms, but also some light microscope and scanning electron micrographs. Unfortunately, some of the hand-drawn diagrams are so overcrowded with small-scale details as to be practically unreadable. This volume belongs primarily in the personal libraries of invertebrate zoologists. Its reading by systems ecologists and soil scientists will be, in part, time well spent.--FRANCIS E. CLARK, Federal Research, Western Region, U.S. Department of Agriculture, P.O. Box E, Fort Collins, CO 80522.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Can commonly measurable traits explain differences in metal accumulation and toxicity in earthworm species

TL;DR: Accumulation and toxicity of Cu, Cd, Ni, and Zn in the earthworms Lumbricus rubellus, Aporrectodea longa, and Eisenia fetida were determined after 28 days exposure in two soils.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of artificial acidification and liming on biomass and on the activity of digestive enzymes in Enchytraeidae (Oligochaeta): Results of an ongoing study

TL;DR: The effects of simulated acid rain and acidification combined with liming on enzymatic activities in the gut of the enchytraied Fridericia sp.
Journal ArticleDOI

Applying Soil Health Indicators to Encourage Sustainable Soil Use: The Transition from Scientific Study to Practical Application

Abstract: The sustainable management of land for agricultural production has at its core a healthy soil, because this reduces the quantity of external inputs, reduces losses of nutrients to the environment, maximises the number of days when the soil can be worked, and has a pore structure that maximises both the retention of water in dry weather and drainage of water in wet weather. Soil health encompasses the physical, chemical, and biological features, but the use of biological indicators is the least well advanced. Sustainability also implies the balanced provision of ecosystem services, which can be more difficult to measure than single indicators. We describe how the key components of the soil food web contribute to a healthy soil and give an overview of the increasing number of scientific studies that have examined the use of biological indicators. A case study is made of the ecosystem service of water infiltration, which is quite an undertaking to measure directly, but which can be inferred from earthworm abundance and biodiversity which is relatively easy to measure. This highlights the difficulty of putting any monitoring scheme into practice and we finish by providing the considerations in starting a new soil health monitoring service in the UK and in maintaining biological monitoring in The Netherlands.
Journal ArticleDOI

Production-ecological modelling explains the difference between potential soil N mineralisation and actual herbage N uptake

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared two different grassland fertiliser management regimes on sand and peat soils: above-ground application of a combination of organic N-rich slurry manure and solid cattle manure (SCM) vs. slit-injected, mineral n-rich SLurry manure, whether or not supplemented with chemical fertiliser (non-SCM), and measured the field N mineralisation as estimated from herbage N uptake in unfertilised plots.
Journal ArticleDOI

Soil faunal vs. fertilization effects on plant nutrition: results of a biocide experiment

TL;DR: There were no strong interactions between faunal manipulations and fertilization, implying that there was little compensatory function of fauna in the absence of fertilizer, and conditions under which soil fauna are important in making mineral nutrients available to plants in the field need further investigation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Separating root and soil microbial contributions to soil respiration: A review of methods and observations

TL;DR: In this article, three primary methods have been used to distinguish hetero- versus autotrophic soil respiration including integration of components contributing to in situ forest soil CO2 efflux (i.e., litter, roots, soil), comparison of soils with and without root exclusion, and application of stable or radioactive isotope methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

The detrital food web in a shortgrass prairie

TL;DR: The experimental approach is supplemented with theoretical calculations of nitrogen transformations in a shortgrass prairie, which incorporate a wide array of information on decomposer organisms, including their feeding preferences, nitrogen contents, life spans, assimilation efficiencies, productio:assimilation ratios, decomposabilities, and population sizes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Earthworms increase plant production: a meta- analysis

TL;DR: It is shown, using meta-analysis, that on average earthworm presence in agroecosystems leads to a 25% increase in crop yield and a 23% increased in aboveground biomass and this suggests that earthworms stimulate plant growth predominantly through releasing nitrogen locked away in residue and soil organic matter.
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The role of proteins in the nitrogen nutrition of ectomycorrhizal plants

TL;DR: It is proposed that the ability of mycorrhizal associations to utilize protein N will lead not only to an increased supply of N to the plant but also to more effective competition with the decomposer population and to an overall tightening of the nitrogen cycle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exotic european earthworm invasion dynamics in northern hardwood forests of minnesota, usa

TL;DR: A succession of earth- worm species across the visible leading edge due to different patterns of colonization by different earthworm species is found, including Lumbricus rubellus which led to the most rapid removal of forest floor material during initial invasion.