Contrasting responses of springtails and mites to elevation and vegetation type in the sub-Arctic

Stef Bokhorst*, G. F. (Ciska) Veen, Maja Sundqvist, Jonathan R. De Long, Paul Kardol, David A. Wardle

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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    Abstract

    Climate change is affecting the species composition and functioning of Arctic and sub-Arctic plant and soil communities. Here we studied patterns in soil microarthropod (springtails and mites) communities across a gradient of increasing elevation that spanned 450 m, across which mean temperature declined by approximately 2.5 °C, in sub-Arctic Sweden. Across this gradient we characterized microarthropod communities in each of two types of vegetation, i.e., heath and meadow, to determine whether their responses to declining temperature differed with vegetation type. Mite abundance declined with increasing elevation, while springtail abundance showed the opposite response. Springtail communities were dominated by larger species at higher elevation. Mite abundance was unaffected by vegetation type, while springtail abundance was 53% higher in the heath than meadow vegetation across the gradient. Springtails but not mites responded differently to elevation in heath and meadow vegetation; hemi-edaphic species dominated in the heath at higher elevation while epi-edaphic species dominated in the meadow. Our results suggest that sub-Arctic mite and springtail communities will likely respond in contrasting ways to changes in vegetation and soil properties resulting from climate warming.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)57-64
    Number of pages8
    JournalPedobiologia
    Volume67
    Early online date2 Mar 2018
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Mar 2018

    Funding

    We would like to thank the Abisko Scientific Research Station for their logistical support and we thank Inge de Vries, Ebba Okfors and Hanna Vestman for assistance during field and laboratory work. This work was funded by a Wallenberg Scholarship awarded to DAW. GFV was supported by a Rubicon Fellowship from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) . This manuscript was improved by the constructive comments of two anonymous reviewers. Appendix A

    Keywords

    • Acari
    • Climate change
    • Collembola
    • Elevational gradient
    • Heath
    • Meadow
    • Microarthropod

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