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Variations in soil chemical properties, microbial biomass, and faunal populations as related to plant functional traits, patch types, and successional stages at Sokolov post-mining site - A case study

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2017

Abstract

The majority of studies that investigate plant functional trait effects on ecosystem properties use traits obtained from databases. However, we know little regarding their explanatory power proportionate to that of the semi-quantitative vegetation properties, and much less still is known when considering their temporal changes in a chronosequence.

We determined whether soil chemical and biological properties were associated with plant functional traits, observed vegetation properties ("patch type" = bare soil, grassy, woody), and site age (10, 18, 28, and 55 years), at four spontaneously overgrown post-mining locations in the Czech Republic. Abiotic soil properties were expected to be closely related to the site age, while above and below ground macrofauna (epigeic and endogeic, respectively), mesofauna, and microbial biomass were expected to be related to the plant functional traits and patch types.

Site age and plant functional traits were more important explanatory factors for most of the chemical, microbial, and macrofaunal soil properties than the patch types. Patch type was the only plant-related factor capable of explaining the mesofauna community variations.

Epigeic macrofauna were found to correlate more strongly with the plant functional traits than endogeic macrofauna. The abundance of most fauna correlated positively with an increase in plant cover and litter input and was significantly higher in vegetated patches and old sites.