Mainly abiotic factors have been considered in examining soil fauna invasion or settlement. The role of soil animals communities was not considered.
Our hypothesis, indeed, can be formulated: the structure and feeding habits of the soil animals community is not able to play some role in the soil rating. Localities, however, can be fragmented into microhabitats.
We studied cultivated fi eld and adjacent unploughed areas (so-called baulks), using the common Berlese-Tullgren apparatus for community structure studies followed by histological tests of food consumed by community members. We selected a group of oribatid mites, which are frequent and abundant.
In the studied localities and their microhabitats, three groups of oribatid mites can be reported. First - ubiquitous species a second - migrants from the less-impacted to more-impacted microhabitats and third - specialists sensitive to severe environmental conditions in more-impacted microhabitat.
They consequently live only in the less-severe, less-impacted unploughed soils and never migrate from these microhabitats. Their grazed and digested food is more diversifi ed, and they included more feeding specialists.