4.7 Article

Subsurface earthworm casts can be important soil microsites specifically influencing the growth of grassland plants

Journal

BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS
Volume 49, Issue 8, Pages 1097-1107

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00374-013-0808-4

Keywords

Aboveground-belowground interactions; Grassland ecology; Mesocosm experiment; Plant-animal-fungi interaction; Polymerase chain reaction (PCR); Vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF)

Categories

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund [B20171-B16]

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Earthworms (Annelida: Oligochaeta) deposit several tons per hectare of casts enriched in nutrients and/or arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and create a spatial and temporal soil heterogeneity that can play a role in structuring plant communities. However, while we begin to understand the role of surface casts, it is still unclear to what extent plants utilize subsurface casts. We conducted a greenhouse experiment using large mesocosms (volume 45 l) to test whether (1) soil microsites consisting of earthworm casts with or without AMF (four Glomus taxa) affect the biomass production of 11 grassland plant species comprising the three functional groups grasses, forbs, and legumes, (2) different ecological groups of earthworms (soil dwellers-Aporrectodea caliginosa vs. vertical burrowers-Lumbricus terrestris) alter potential influences of soil microsites (i.e., four earthworms x two subsurface microsites x two AMF treatments). Soil microsites were artificially inserted in a 25-cm depth, and afterwards, plant species were sown in a regular pattern; the experiment ran for 6 months. Our results show that minute amounts of subsurface casts (0.89 g kg(-1) soil) decreased the shoot and root production of forbs and legumes, but not that of grasses. The presence of earthworms reduced root biomass of grasses only. Our data also suggest that subsurface casts provide microsites from which root AMF colonization can start. Ecological groups of earthworms did not differ in their effects on plant production or AMF distribution. Taken together, these findings suggest that subsurface earthworm casts might play a role in structuring plant communities by specifically affecting the growth of certain functional groups of plants.

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