Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

The role of multiple global change factors in driving soil functions and microbial biodiversity

Matthias C. Rillig, Masahiro Ryo, Anika Lehmann, Carlos A. Aguilar‐Trigueros, Sabine Buchert, Anja Wulf, Aiko Iwasaki, Julien Roy, Gaowen Yang

Science · 2019

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Summary

Soils underpin terrestrial ecosystem functions, but they face numerous anthropogenic pressures. Despite their crucial ecological role, we know little about how soils react to more than two environmental factors at a time. Here, we show experimentally that increasing the number of simultaneous global change factors (up to 10) caused increasing directional changes in soil properties, soil processes, and microbial communities, though there was greater uncertainty in predicting the magnitude of change. Our study provides a blueprint for addressing multifactor change with an efficient, broadly applicable experimental design for studying the impacts of global environmental change.

Subject
Other / interdisciplinary
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1126/science.aay2832
Catalogue ID
SNmojxdafb-bgm00o
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