BiodivERsA - (1) soils and sediments, and (2) land- river and sea-scapes (habitat connectivity, green and blue infrastructures, and naturing cities)

Predicting European forest soil biodiversity and its functioning under climate change – SoilForEUROPE

Submission summary

Despite being the largest ecosystem in Europe forests remained marginal in the past research efforts on how soil biodiversity affects ecosystem services. This is critical since forest soils play a key role in the carbon (C) cycle, with a strong impact on climate change mitigation policy. In order to anticipate changing climatic conditions, decision making in forestry concentrates on the choice of tree species to be planted and their densities, neglecting belowground diversity entirely. However, soil biodiversity can strongly affect ecosystem resistance and resilience to climate change. With SoilForEUROPE we propose to assess (1) how soil biodiversity is related to tree diversity across a broad climatic gradient, (2) how changes in soil biodiversity affect soil processes, (3) how soil biodiversity and the processes it drives respond to severe drought events, and (4) how the limited knowledge on soil biodiversity by forest managers, stakeholders and the general public may impair proper decision making in the face of climate change. We address these issues by taking advantage of an existing network of field sites in six different European countries. Additional experiments in the field and in the European Ecotron will allow a detailed mechanistic understanding of soil biodiversity effects on ecosystem functioning. With approaches ranging from genomics, to high resolution flux measurements, and to surveys and choice experiments for forest managers and end-users, our cutting edge interdisciplinary research will change the perception and management of soil biodiversity in Europe.

Project coordination

Stephan HÄTTENSCHWILER (CNRS - Centre of Evolutionary and Functional Ecology)

The author of this summary is the project coordinator, who is responsible for the content of this summary. The ANR declines any responsibility as for its contents.

Partner

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
UFZ Centre for Environmental Research Leipzig-Halle
CNRS ECOTRON UPS 3248 CNRS - ECOTRON
CNRS CEFE UMR5175 CNRS - Centre of Evolutionary and Functional Ecology
KU Leuven
Ghent University
University of Freiburg

Help of the ANR 343,062 euros
Beginning and duration of the scientific project: December 2016 - 36 Months

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