• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Trophic shift of soil animal species with forest type as indicated by stable isotope analysis
  • Contributor: Klarner, Bernhard; Ehnes, Roswitha B.; Erdmann, Georgia; Eitzinger, Bernhard; Pollierer, Melanie M.; Maraun, Mark; Scheu, Stefan
  • Published: Wiley, 2014
  • Published in: Oikos, 123 (2014) 10, Seite 1173-1181
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2013.00939.x
  • ISSN: 0030-1299; 1600-0706
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Anthropogenic land use shapes the dynamics and composition of central European forests and changes the quality and availability of resources of the decomposer system. These changes likely alter the structure and functioning of soil animal food webs. Using stable isotope analysis (13C, 15N) we investigated the trophic position and resource use of soil animal species in each of four forest types (coniferous, young managed beech, old managed beech and unmanaged beech forests) across three regions in Germany. Twenty‐eight species of soil invertebrates were analyzed covering three consumer levels and a representative spectrum of feeding types and morphologies. Data on stable isotope signatures of leaf litter, fine roots and soil were included to evaluate to which extent signatures of soil animals vary with those of local resources. Soil animal δ15N and δ13C signatures varied with the respective signatures of leaf litter and fine roots. After calibration to leaf litter signatures, soil animal stable isotope signatures of the different beech forests did not differ significantly. However, thick leaf litter layers, such as those in coniferous forests, were associated with low animal stable isotope signatures presumably due to reduced access of decomposer animals to root‐derived resources, suggesting that the decomposer food web is shifted towards leaf litter based energy pathways with the shift affecting all consumer levels. Variation in stable isotope signatures of soil animal species with litter quality parameters suggests that nutrition of third level but not first and second level consumers is related to litter quality, potentially due to microorganisms locking up litter resources thereby hampering their propagation to higher trophic levels.