Cultural ecosystem services provided by the biodiversity of forest soils:a European review
Autor: | Tanja Mrak, Jurga Motiejūnaitė, Reda Iršėnaitė, Ivano Brunner, Tarja Lehto, Isabella Børja, Ivika Ostonen, Edda Sigurdís Oddsdóttir, Brynhildur Bjarnadottir, Mark R. Bakker |
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Přispěvatelé: | Nature Research Centre, Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO), Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences [Tartu], University of Tartu, Interactions Sol Plante Atmosphère (UMR ISPA), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Sciences Agronomiques de Bordeaux-Aquitaine (Bordeaux Sciences Agro), University of Akureyri, Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL, Slovenian Forestry Institute, Forest Research, School of Forest Sciences, University of Eastern Finland |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
funkcije gozdov
Evropa Soil biodiversity Soil biology [SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] Biodiversity Soil Science 010501 environmental sciences 01 natural sciences soil biota Ecosystem services funkcije gozdov gozdna tla Evropa ekosistemske storitve gozdovi gozdna tla Ecosystem udc:630*1 Soil mesofauna 0105 earth and related environmental sciences 2. Zero hunger forests soil biota forests soil ecosystem services Europe gozdovi Ecology Biota 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences 15. Life on land ekosistemske storitve soil ecosystem services Europe Geography [SDE]Environmental Sciences 040103 agronomy & agriculture 0401 agriculture forestry and fisheries Terrestrial ecosystem udc:630*114+630*9(4)(045)=111 |
Zdroj: | Geoderma, str. 19-30, Vol. 343, 2019 COBISS-ID: 4619786 Geoderma Geoderma, Elsevier, 2019, 343, pp.19-30. ⟨10.1016/j.geoderma.2019.02.025⟩ Geoderma, vol. 343, pp. 19-30, 2019. |
ISSN: | 0016-7061 1872-6259 |
Popis: | Soil is one of the most species-rich habitats and plays a crucial role in the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems. It is acknowledged that soils and their biota deliver many ecosystem services. However, up to now, cultural ecosystem services (CES) provided by soil biodiversity remained virtually unknown. Here we present a multilingual and multisubject literature review on cultural benefits provided by belowground biota in European forests. We found 226 papers mentioning impact of soil biota on the cultural aspects of human life. According to the reviewed literature, soil organisms contribute to all CES. Impact on CES, as reflected in literature, was highest for fungi and lowest for microorganisms and mesofauna. Cultural benefits provided by soil biota clearly prevailed in the total of the reviewed references, but there were also negative effects mentioned in six CES. The same organism groups or even individual species may have negative impacts within one CES and at the same time act as an ecosystem service provider for another CES. The CES were found to be supported at several levels of ecosystem service provision: from single species to two or more functional/taxonomical groups and in some cases morphological diversity acted as a surrogate for species diversity. Impact of soil biota on CES may be both direct % by providing the benefits (or dis-benefits) and indirect through the use of the products or services obtained from these benefits. The CES from soil biota interacted among themselves and with other ES, but more than often, they did not create bundles, because there exist temporal fluctuations in value of CES and a time lag between direct and indirect benefits. Strong regionality was noted for most of CES underpinned by soil biota: the same organism group or species may have strong impact on CES (positive, negative or both) in some regions while no, minor or opposite effects in others. Contrarily to the CES based on landscapes, in the CES provided by soil biota distance between the ecosystem and its CES benefiting area is shorter (CES based on landscapes are used less by local people and more by visitors, meanwhile CES based on species or organism groups are used mainly by local people). Our review revealed the existence of a considerable amount of spatially fragmented and semantically rich information highlighting cultural values provided by forest soil biota in Europe. Avtorica iz Slov.: Tanja Mrak. Bibliografija: str. 27-30. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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