Earthworm records and habitat associations in the British Isles

IF 3.7 2区 农林科学 Q1 ECOLOGY European Journal of Soil Biology Pub Date : 2024-06-17 DOI:10.1016/j.ejsobi.2024.103642
F. Ashwood , K.D. Brown , E. Sherlock , A.M. Keith , J. Forster , K.R. Butt
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Abstract

The National Earthworm Recording Scheme (NERS) is the most comprehensive national database of earthworm species occurrence records for the British Isles, and possibly for any individual country in the world. Utilising the NERS database, we sought to update the current knowledge of earthworm species occurrences in the UK, Ireland and Channel Islands; identify species-specific habitat and microhabitat associations; reveal any biases and complementarities between amateur naturalist and research-related earthworm record collection; and inform how future earthworm sampling can be better focussed to improve our knowledge of earthworm ecology. We found that the most commonly occurring earthworm species were present in farmland and woodland, and recovered via soil pit sampling, the most common habitat-sampling protocol combinations. However, several earthworm species showed specificity to alternative habitats (such as trees, wetlands, and compost), and association with microhabitat (non-soil) sampling. There were clear disparities between scientific researchers and amateur naturalist recorders in terms of habitat types visited and sampling protocols/microhabitats used in the collection of earthworm records. Most importantly, we found that earthworm species currently considered to be nationally ‘rare’ in the British Isles are significantly associated with the most under-represented habitat-protocol/microhabitat combinations (forest deadwood and other microhabitats, in addition to scrubland, wetland and heathland habitats), and thus may not be rare, only under-sampled. We therefore encourage earthworm researchers and recorders to give greater attention to these situations, to gain new insights into these earthworm species' ecologies and distributions. Finally, we would like to promote the establishment of earthworm recording schemes in other countries, to enable national and global collaborative monitoring of earthworm responses to environmental change.

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不列颠群岛的蚯蚓记录和生境关联
国家蚯蚓记录计划(NERS)是不列颠群岛乃至世界上任何一个国家最全面的蚯蚓物种出现记录国家数据库。利用国家蚯蚓记录计划数据库,我们试图更新目前对英国、爱尔兰和海峡群岛蚯蚓物种出现情况的了解;确定特定物种的栖息地和微生境关联;揭示业余博物学家和与研究相关的蚯蚓记录收集工作之间的偏差和互补性;并为今后如何更好地集中蚯蚓取样提供信息,以提高我们对蚯蚓生态学的了解。我们发现,最常见的蚯蚓物种出现在农田和林地中,并通过土坑取样(最常见的生境-取样方案组合)获得。然而,一些蚯蚓物种显示出对其他栖息地(如树木、湿地和堆肥)的特异性,以及与微生境(非土壤)取样的关联性。在收集蚯蚓记录时,科研人员和业余自然记录者在访问的栖息地类型和采样方案/微生境方面存在明显差异。最重要的是,我们发现目前在不列颠群岛被认为是国家级 "稀有 "的蚯蚓物种与代表性最弱的生境-协议/微生境组合(森林枯木和其他微生境,以及灌丛地、湿地和荒地生境)有显著关联,因此可能并不稀有,只是采样不足。因此,我们鼓励蚯蚓研究人员和记录人员更多地关注这些情况,以便对这些蚯蚓物种的生态和分布有新的认识。最后,我们希望促进在其他国家建立蚯蚓记录计划,以便在国家和全球范围内合作监测蚯蚓对环境变化的反应。
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来源期刊
European Journal of Soil Biology
European Journal of Soil Biology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
51
审稿时长
27 days
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Soil Biology covers all aspects of soil biology which deal with microbial and faunal ecology and activity in soils, as well as natural ecosystems or biomes connected to ecological interests: biodiversity, biological conservation, adaptation, impact of global changes on soil biodiversity and ecosystem functioning and effects and fate of pollutants as influenced by soil organisms. Different levels in ecosystem structure are taken into account: individuals, populations, communities and ecosystems themselves. At each level, different disciplinary approaches are welcomed: molecular biology, genetics, ecophysiology, ecology, biogeography and landscape ecology.
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