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Impacts of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide on model terrestrial ecosystems

Authors :
Christian Kampichler
Ellen Kandeler
Lindsey J. Thompson
Richard D. Bardgett
G. S. Hall
Tim M. Blackburn
T. M. Bezemer
Paul F. Cannon
T. H. Jones
Susan E. Hartley
Kenneth D. Bruce
John H. Lawton
G. Howson
Clive G. Jones
Donald A. Ritchie
Source :
ResearcherID

Abstract

In model terrestrial ecosystems maintained for three plant generations at elevated concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide, increases in photosynthetically fixed carbon were allocated below ground, raising concentrations of dissolved organic carbon in soil. These effects were then transmitted up the decomposer food chain. Soil microbial biomass was unaffected, but the composition of soil fungal species changed, with increases in rates of cellulose decomposition. There were also changes in the abundance and species composition of Collembola, fungal-feeding arthropods. These results have implications for long-term feedback processes in soil ecosystems that are subject to rising global atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ResearcherID
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9e97dadc0c46b1352169c4dc32eb12dc