Epi-anecic rather than strict-anecic earthworms enhance soil enzymatic activities

Publication date: Available online 4 February 2019Source: Soil Biology and BiochemistryAuthor(s): Kevin Hoeffner, Mathieu Santonja, Daniel Cluzeau, Cécile MonardAbstractEarthworms in interaction with soil microorganisms play a key role in litter decomposition. Moreover, as soil engineers, earthworms modify microbial communities and their enzymatic activities. Most studies focusing on earthworms and soil enzymatic activities compare distinct ecological categories of earthworms whereas their contributions and interactions within a given ecological category remain largely unknown. In this context, the aims of the present study were to determine and compare the contribution of (1) three strict-anecic earthworm species, (2) three epi-anecic earthworm species and (3) the pairwise interactions between these different species on Lolium perenne leaf litter decomposition and soil microbial activity. After 30 days of incubation, the surface litter mass loss and five soil enzymatic activities (FDAse, β-D-glucosidase, cellobiohydrolase, leucine amino-peptidase and acid phosphatase) were measured in both earthworm burrows and middens. In mono-specific assemblages, leaf litter mass loss and enzymatic activities were significantly higher in the presence of epi-anecic compared to strict-anecic species, whatever the species identity. These differences were higher for the β-D-glucosidase, leucine amino-peptidase and FDAse (+78%, +57% and +34%, respectively). Earthworm species interactions at...
Source: Soil Biology and Biochemistry - Category: Biology Source Type: research