Document généré le 10/03/2026 depuis l'adresse: https://www.documentation.eauetbiodiversite.fr/fr/notice/biodiversity-co-variation-patterns-in-a-range-of-soil-organism-taxa-across-highly-contrasting-ecosystems-
Biodiversity co-variation patterns in a range of soil organism taxa across highly contrasting ecosystems
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Identifiant documentaire
8-5368037
Identifiant OAI
5368037
Notice source
https://hal.science/hal-05368037v1
Auteur(s):
Tortosa Axelle,Freschet Grégoire T,Trap Jean,Brauman Alain,Capowiez Yvan,Coq Sylvain,Félix-Faure Jim,Fromin Nathalie,Gandois Laure,Guiresse Maritxu,Huys Raoul,Lecerf Antoine,Limousin Jean-Marc,Milcu Alexandru,Nahmani Johanne,Robin Agnès,Sánchez-Pérez José-Miguel,Sauvage Sabine,Tallec Tiphaine,Wittling Claire,Hattenschwiler Stephan
Mots clés
Soil biodiversity
Alpha diversity
Community composition
Multi-taxa
Soil moisture conditions
Spatial integration
Date de publication
17/11/2025
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Description
Soil biodiversity as a critical component of terrestrial ecosystems and their functioning varies across spatial scales and environmental conditions. However, it remains unclear whether and how biodiversity patterns co-vary among different soil taxa across ecosystems.In this study, we compared diversity patterns of plants, earthworms, nematodes, bacteria, and fungi, as five major groups of soil organisms, across five strongly contrasting ecosystems ranging from mountain peatland to crop fields, including within-ecosystem variation in soil moisture. We hypothesized co-variation in taxonomic richness (alpha diversity) and composition (beta diversity) of multiple groups of soil organisms across ecosystems, moisture conditions and spatial scales.In partial contrast to our initial hypothesis, co-variation in the taxonomic richness among these groups was limited, though significant positive associations were found among bacteria, fungi, and earthworms across all sites. Beta diversity showed substantial co-variation among all soil organism groups, reflecting a spatial coupling of their communities. These patterns were more pronounced in near-natural and no-till agroecosystems compared to conventional agricultural systems. Our results highlight that ecosystem type shapes broad-scale taxonomic richness, while local soil moisture critically influences soil diversity and spatial community composition, emphasizing the multi-scale drivers of soil biodiversity.
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