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Community Structure of Lumbricidae in Permanent Grassland and Arable Land

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EN
Abstrakty
EN
Lumbricidae play a key role in the soil environment as “the ecosystem engineers”. They participate in all the categories of services provided by ecosystems. In agricultural areas, the conventional intensive farming practices have led to a significant decline in the biological diversity of soils including earthworms. In this study, we attempted to characterize the community structure of earthworms in permanent grassland and arable land of the Didactic & Experimental Station of Rzeszów University in Krasne near Rzeszów. Similar densities of earthworms were observed in the grassland and in the arable land (101.01 ± 18.03 ind. ∙ m-2 and 82.12 ± 18.26 ind. ∙ m-2, respectively) (p > 0.05) as well as a similar biomass of Lumbricidae (77.72 ± 15.30 g ∙ m-2 and 54.34 ± 11.72 g ∙ m-2) (p > 0.05). In the research, 7 species of earthworms were found in the permanent grassland and 6 representatives of Lumbricidae were identified in the arable land. The identified earthworms represented all three main morpho-ecological groups. The density and biomass of epi-endogeic earthworm L. rubellus and the anecic species of L. terrestris were shown to be higher (p < 0.05) in the grassland as compared to the arable land. In order to protect Lumbricidae and to sustain the beneficial role of earthworms in an ecosystem, it is necessary to monitor the negative changes in populations of earthworm species attributed to various farming practices.
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1--6
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 41 poz., tab.
Twórcy
  • Department of Natural Theories of Agriculture and Environmental Education, Faculty of Biology and Agriculture, University of Rzeszow, Cwiklinskiej 1a, 35-601 Rzeszow, Poland
  • Department of Natural Theories of Agriculture and Environmental Education, Faculty of Biology and Agriculture, University of Rzeszow, Cwiklinskiej 1a, 35-601 Rzeszow, Poland
  • Department of Natural Theories of Agriculture and Environmental Education, Faculty of Biology and Agriculture, University of Rzeszow, Cwiklinskiej 1a, 35-601 Rzeszow, Poland
  • Department of Natural Theories of Agriculture and Environmental Education, Faculty of Biology and Agriculture, University of Rzeszow, Cwiklinskiej 1a, 35-601 Rzeszow, Poland
  • Department of Natural Theories of Agriculture and Environmental Education, Faculty of Biology and Agriculture, University of Rzeszow, Cwiklinskiej 1a, 35-601 Rzeszow, Poland
autor
  • Department of Natural Theories of Agriculture and Environmental Education, Faculty of Biology and Agriculture, University of Rzeszow, Cwiklinskiej 1a, 35-601 Rzeszow, Poland
Bibliografia
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  • 5. Briones M.J.I., Schmidt O. 2017.Conventional tillage decreases the abundance and biomass of earthworms and alters their community structure in a global meta-analysis. Global Change Biology, 23(10), 4396–4419.
  • 6. Capowiez Y., Cadoux S., Bouchant P., Ruy S., Estrade J.R., Richard G., Boizard H. 2009. The effect of tillage type and cropping system on earthworm communities, macroporosity and water infiltration. Soil and Tillage Research, 105, 209–216.
  • 7. Coleman D.C., Crossley D.A., Hendrix P.F. 2004. Fundamentals of soil ecology. Elsevier Academic Press, Brulington.
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  • 10. EN ISO 23611–1:2006. Soil quality. Sampling of soil invertebrates. Part 1. Hand-sorting and formalin extraction of earthworms. Geneva. Switzerland.
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  • 31. Rożen A., Mysłajek R.W., Sobczyk Ł. 2013. Altitude versus vegetation as the factors Influencing the diversity and abundance of earthworms and other soil macrofauna in montane habitat (Silesian Beskid Mts, Western Carpathians). Polish Journal of Ecology, 61(1), 145–156.
  • 32. Ryl B. 1984. Comparison of communities of earthworms (Lumbricidae) occurring in diffrent ecosystem of agricultural landscape. Polish Ecology, 2(1), 155–165 (in Polish).
  • 33. Schon N.L., Mackay A. D., Gray R.A., Van Koten C., Dodd M.B. 2017. Influence of earthworm abundance and diversity on soil structure and the implications for soil services throughout the season. Pedobiologia, 62. 41–47.
  • 34. Smith R.G., McSwiney C.P., Grandy A.S., Suwanwaree P., Snider R.M., Robertson G.P. 2008. Diversity and abundance of earthworms across anagricultural land-use intensity gradient. Soil and Tillage Research, 100, 83–88.
  • 35. Van Capelle, C., Schrader, S., Brunotte, J. 2012. Tillage-inducedchanges in the functional diversity of soil biota: a review with a focus on German data. European Journal of Soil Biology, 50, 165–181.
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  • 37. Whalen J.K. 2004. Spatial and temporal distribution of earthworm patches in corn field and forest systems of southwestern Quebec, Canada. Applied Soil Ecology, 27, 143–151.
  • 38. Witkowski T. 1983. Numbers and biomass of earthworms (Lumbricidae) under different crop rotation conditions. Annals of Soil Science, 34, 83–102 (in Polish).
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  • 40. Zangerlé A., Pando A., Lavelle P. 2011. Do earthworms and roots cooperate to build soil macroaggregates? A microcosm experiment. Geoderma, 167–168, 303–309.
  • 41. Zisci A. 1962. Determination of number and size of sampling unit for estimating lumbricid populations of arable soils. [In:]: Progress in soil zoology. [eds.] P.W. Murphy. Butterworths, London, 68–71.
Uwagi
Opracowanie rekordu w ramach umowy 509/P-DUN/2018 ze środków MNiSW przeznaczonych na działalność upowszechniającą naukę (2019).
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-27a8a171-9b3c-4863-ab84-53aed6476993
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