Soil properties as indicators of treeline dynamics in relation to anthropogenic pressure and climate change

Autor(en): Moscatelli, M. Cristina
Bonifacio, Eleonora
Chiti, Tommaso
Cudlin, Pavel
Dinca, Lucian
Gomoryova, Erika
Grego, Stefano
La Porta, Nicola
Karlinski, Leszek
Pellis, Guido
Rudawska, Maria
Squartini, Andrea
Zhiyanski, Miglena
Broll, Gabriele 
Stichwörter: BIOLOGICAL INDICATORS; CARBON; DIVERSITY; Ecosystem services; ECTOMYCORRHIZAL FUNGI; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; FOREST; Forest resilience; LAND-USE CHANGE; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES; Mountains; NITROGEN; ORGANIC-MATTER; VEGETATION
Erscheinungsdatum: 2017
Herausgeber: INTER-RESEARCH
Journal: CLIMATE RESEARCH
Volumen: 73
Ausgabe: 1-2
Startseite: 73
Seitenende: 84
Zusammenfassung: 
Mountain forests, treeline ecotones included, provide numerous ecosystem services. However, different drivers heavily impact the treeline areas, in particular anthropogenic pressure and climate change. Any change affecting the aboveground portion of terrestrial ecosystems automatically influences their belowground part, i.e. soil and soil organisms. Therefore, the focus of the present paper is on the soil resource that provides multiple ecosystem services, such as carbon storage, water filtration, food and biomass provisioning, biodiversity, maintenance, etc. Soil physical, chemical, and biological properties can be very helpful as indicators of ecosystem services in mountain regions. A selection and integration of appropriate indicators of soil quality is thus needed for soil monitoring and assessment in treeline areas. In this paper, results of case studies from mountain regions in Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Italy, Romania, and Slovakia are presented. From these studies, it emerges that soil organic matter (content and quality), pH, and microbial parameters show significant changes in response to anthropogenic pressures and/or climate change. These indicators of soil quality, either in the short-or in the long-term, can thus be used as reliable and sensitive tools for monitoring actions. However, it is advisable to integrate this basic set with additional indicators that can be further selected in relation to specific conditions, such as geographical area, lithological substrate, land use, and management practices.
ISSN: 0936577X
DOI: 10.3354/cr01478

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