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Journal article

Interactions between above- and belowground organisms modified in climate change experiments

From

University of Copenhagen1

University of Göttingen2

Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark3

Ecosystems Programme, Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark4

Climate change has been shown to affect ecosystem process rates and community composition, with direct and indirect effects on belowground food webs. In particular, altered rates of herbivory under future climate4 can be expected to influence above–belowground interactions. Here, we use a multifactor, field-scale climate change experiment and independently manipulate atmospheric CO2 concentration, air and soil temperature and drought in all combinations since 2005.

We show that changes in these factors modify the interaction between above- and belowground organisms.We use an insect herbivore to experimentally increase aboveground herbivory in grass phytometers exposed to all eight combinations of climate change factors for three years. Aboveground herbivory increased the abundance of belowground protozoans, microbial growth and microbial nitrogen availability.

Increased CO2 modified these links through a reduction in herbivory and cascading effects through the soil food web. Interactions between CO2, drought and warming can affect belowground protozoan abundance. Our findings imply that climate change affects aboveground–belowground interactions through changes in nutrient availability.

Language: English
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Year: 2012
Pages: 805-808
ISSN: 17586798 and 1758678x
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1038/NCLIMATE1544
ORCIDs: Mikkelsen, Teis Nørgaard and 0000-0002-7067-5586

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