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Invasive earthworms shift soil microbial community structure in northern North American forest ecosystems

Olga Ferlian, Kezia Goldmann, Michael Bonkowski, Kenneth Dumack, Tesfaye Wubet, Nico Eisenhauer

2024iScience10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Invasive earthworms colonize ecosystems around the globe. Compared to other species' invasions, earthworm invasions have received little attention. Previous studies indicated their tremendous effects on resident soil biota representing a major part of the terrestrial biodiversity. We investigated effects of earthworm invasion on soil microbial communities in three forests in North America by conducting DNA sequencing of soil bacteria, fungi, and protists in two soil depths. Our study shows that microbial diversity was lower in highly invaded forest areas. While bacterial diversity was strongly affected compared to fungi and protists, fungal community composition and family dominance were strongly affected compared to bacteria and protists. We found most species specialized on invasion in fungi, mainly represented by saprotrophs. Comparably, few protist species, mostly bacterivorous, were specialized on invasion. As one of the first observational studies, we investigated earthworm invasion on three kingdoms showing distinct taxa- and trophic level-specific responses to earthworm invasion.

Topics & Concepts

EarthwormBiologyEcologySoil biologyTrophic levelBiodiversityDominance (genetics)EcosystemBiotaTerrestrial ecosystemSoil waterGeneBiochemistrySoil Carbon and Nitrogen DynamicsInvertebrate Taxonomy and EcologyPeatlands and Wetlands Ecology
Invasive earthworms shift soil microbial community structure in northern North American forest ecosystems | Litcius