Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1163260
Título: Soil BON earthworm: a global initiative on earthworm distribution, traits, and spatiotemporal diversity patterns.
Autoria: GANAULT, P.
RISTOK, C.
PHILLIPS, H. R. P.
HEDDE, M.
CAPOWIEZ, Y.
BOTTINELLI, N.
DECAËNS, T.
MARCHAN, D.
GÉRARD, S.
MATHIEU, J.
POTAPOV, A.
CAMERON, E. K.
BROWN, G. G.
BARTZ, M.
ZEISS, R.
ZI, Y.
TSIAFOULI, M.
RUSSELL, D. J.
GUERRA, C.
EISENHAUER, N.
Afiliação: PIERRE GANAULT, UNIVERSITÉ DE ROUEN NORMANDIE
CHRISTIAN RISTOK, GERMAN CENTRE FOR INTEGRATIVE BIODIVERSITY RESEARCH
HELEN R. P. PHILLIPS, NETHERLANDS INSTITUTE OF ECOLOGY
MICKAËL HEDDE, ECO&SOLS, INRAE, IRD, CIRAD, INSTITUT AGRO
YVAN CAPOWIEZ, UNIVERSITY OF AVIGNON
NICOLAS BOTTINELLI, SORBONNE UNIVERSITÉ
THIBAUD DECAËNS, UNIVERSITÉ DE MONTPELLIER
DANIEL MARCHAN, UNIVERSITÉ DE MONTPELLIER
SYLVAIN GÉRARD, ECO&SOLS, INRAE, IRD, CIRAD, INSTITUT AGRO
JÉRÔME MATHIEU, SORBONNE UNIVERSITÉ
ANTON POTAPOV, SENCKENBERG MUSEUM FOR NATURAL HISTORY GÖRLITZ
ERIN K. CAMERON, SAINT MARY’S UNIVERSITY
GEORGE GARDNER BROWN, CNPF
MARIE BARTZ, UNIVERSITY OF COIMBRA
ROMY ZEISS, GERMAN CENTRE FOR INTEGRATIVE BIODIVERSITY RESEARCH
YACOUBA ZI, SORBONNE UNIVERSITÉ
MARIA TSIAFOULI, ARISTOTLE UNIVERSITY OF THESSALONIKI
DAVID J. RUSSELL, SENCKENBERG MUSEUM FOR NATURAL HISTORY GÖRLITZ
CARLOS GUERRA, LEIPZIG UNIVERSITY, TALSTRASSE
NICO EISENHAUER, LEIPZIG UNIVERSITY.
Ano de publicação: 2024
Referência: Soil Organisms, v. 96, n. 1, p. 47-60, 2024.
Conteúdo: Recent research on earthworms has shed light on their global distribution, with high alpha richness in temperate zones and high beta diversity in tropical areas. Climate and agricultural practices, notably plowing and conservation methods, were shown to strongly influence earthworm communities. However, data gaps persist in regions like North Australia, Asia, Russia, and Africa, limiting our understanding of earthworm distribution and their responses to global changes. Understanding changes within earthworm communities is crucial given their profound influence on ecosystem functions such as soil structure, nutrient dynamics, and plant growth. Classifying earthworms into functional groups remains complex, prompting the adoption of a trait-based approach for a more comprehensive classification, but there is no representative global data on earthworm traits. To address these knowledge gaps, the Soil BON Earthworm initiative aims at creating a global community of earthworm experts, standardizing sampling methods and databases, collecting time series data on earthworm communities, and modeling future earthworm distributions under different climate scenarios. The initiative aims to address key questions, such as the dynamic of earthworm communities over time and their response to environmental factors and anthropogenic influences, their impact on ecosystem functioning, and the redefinition of functional groups based on traits. The consortium invites researchers worldwide to contribute to this endeavor and encourages the resampling of study sites, to expand currently limited time series datasets. To facilitate data collection, standardized protocols and data templates are proposed, ensuring data quality and interoperability. Furthermore, the initiative intends to make use of citizen science in expanding observations and improving taxonomic coverage, highlighting platforms like iNaturalist for community en-gagement. Soil BON Earthworm seeks to unite global expertise and foster collaborative research to address critical gaps in under-standing earthworm ecology and its implications for ecosystems at a global scale.
Thesagro: Minhoca
Ecossistema
Ecologia
NAL Thesaurus: Community ecology
Earthworms
Palavras-chave: Temporal dynamics
Citizen science
Functional traits
Ecosystem functioning
Características funcionais
Ciência cidadã
Dinâmica temporal
Digital Object Identifier: 10.25674/362
Tipo do material: Artigo de periódico
Acesso: openAccess
Aparece nas coleções:Artigo em periódico indexado (CNPF)

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