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Soil networks become more connected and take up more carbon as nature restoration progresses.

Elly MorriënS Emilia HannulaL Basten SnoekNico R HelmsingHans ZweersMattias de HollanderRaquel Luján SotoMarie-Lara BouffaudMarc BuéeWim DimmersHenk DuytsStefan GeisenMariangela GirlandaRob I GriffithsHelene-Bracht JørgensenJohn JensenPierre PlassartDirk RedeckerRűdiger M SchmelzOlaf SchmidtBruce C ThomsonEmilie TisserantStephane UrozAnne WindingMark J BaileyMichael BonkowskiJack H FaberFrancis M MartinPhilippe LemanceauWietse de BoerJohannes A van VeenWim H van der Putten
Published in: Nature communications (2017)
Soil organisms have an important role in aboveground community dynamics and ecosystem functioning in terrestrial ecosystems. However, most studies have considered soil biota as a black box or focussed on specific groups, whereas little is known about entire soil networks. Here we show that during the course of nature restoration on abandoned arable land a compositional shift in soil biota, preceded by tightening of the belowground networks, corresponds with enhanced efficiency of carbon uptake. In mid- and long-term abandoned field soil, carbon uptake by fungi increases without an increase in fungal biomass or shift in bacterial-to-fungal ratio. The implication of our findings is that during nature restoration the efficiency of nutrient cycling and carbon uptake can increase by a shift in fungal composition and/or fungal activity. Therefore, we propose that relationships between soil food web structure and carbon cycling in soils need to be reconsidered.
Keyphrases
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