Developing Indicators of Soil Productivity, Function and Biodiversity through Soil Biotic Communities.

ABSTRACT

Potential indicator species for forest management were explored in a series of studies of old-growth boreal stands encompassing a range of inherent site productivity. The biota surveyed included terrestrial cryptogams, ectomycorrhizal fungi on roots of A. lasiocarpa, epigeous ectomycorrhizal mushrooms, mesofauna of the forest floor (mites and springtails) and macrofauna (beetles, ants, and spiders). Manuscripts on the cryptogams and ectomycorrhizal fungi are completed, and final resolution of a few remaining faunal taxa is almost complete. Some interim conclusions on the overall patterns of biodiversity are presented here. The number of species per plot (0.15 ha) ranged from 145 to 205 (vascular plants, cryptogams, ectomycorrhizal fungi, springtails, spiders and ants), which represents about 1/3 rd the total diversity of this landscape (607 species; not including beetles, mites). Total species richness by plot increased by approx. 33% and then plateaued with site productivity, suggesting that greater amounts of soil moisture, nutrients and organic matter allowed for the development of a richer community of soil organisms. Beta diversity, which is the turnover of species across a landscape, averaged 31% by plot, meaning any one individual plot had approx. 30% of the total species found over the 19 plots. The uniqueness of species assemblages by site series was moderate, and so, for example, preserving mesic sites alone would provide habitat for about 50% of the total landscape organisms. Capturing a range of dry to moist upland sites as oldgrowth management areas or wildlife reserves would therefore potentially double the total number of species within the conservation areas. Our results might also be considered in monitoring programs for late-seral species, which generally use space for time substitution as an experimental design. Such an approach would be 2 less dependent on site for soil fauna, as the majority of these species were ubiquitous, whereas cryptogams and ectomycorrhizal fungi could be confounded by edaphic effects on species assemblages. The benefit of this finer site association, however, is that these species could provide more sensitive indicators for ongoing changes in soil fertility under forest management. Overall we found a large source of biodiversity associated with forest soils and substrates (6 x the diversity of the vascular plants), and a large pool of potential species for environmental monitoring. Indicators could include those species representing oligotrophic, mesotrophic or eutrophic soil conditions, and functional organization such as the balance of rare versus common species on the landscape.

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Author(s) J. M. Kranabetter
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Affiliated Institution(s) Bulkley Valley Research Centre
Publication Year 2009