Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Increasing the number of stressors reduces soil ecosystem services worldwide

Matthias C. Rillig, Marcel G. A. van der Heijden, Miguel Berdugo, Yu‐Rong Liu, Judith Riedo, Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro, Eduardo Moreno‐Jiménez, Ferran Romero, Leho Tedersoo, Manuel Delgado‐Baquerizo

Nature Climate Change · 2023

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Summary

Increasing the number of environmental stressors could decrease ecosystem functioning in soils. Yet this relationship has never been globally assessed outside laboratory experiments. Here, using two independent global standardized field surveys, and a range of natural and human factors, we test the relationship between the number of environmental stressors exceeding different critical thresholds and the maintenance of multiple ecosystem services across biomes. Our analysis shows that, multiple stressors, from medium levels (>50%), negatively and significantly correlates with impacts on ecosystem services, and that multiple stressors crossing a high-level critical threshold (over 75% of maximum observed levels), reduces soil biodiversity and functioning globally. The number of environmental

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41558-023-01627-2
Catalogue ID
BFmoef2q79-2ad56l
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