Forecasting tillage and soil warming effects on earthworm populations
Authored by Richard M Sibly, Pernille Thorbek, Alice S A Johnston
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.13096
Sponsors:
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Lawes Agricultural Trust
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Abstract
1. Healthy soils are crucial for sustainable food production, but
tillage limits the biological regulation of essential ecosystem
services. Better understanding of the mechanisms driving management
effects on soil ecosystem engineers is needed to support sustainable
management under environmental change.
2. This paper presents the Energy-Environment-Earthworm (EEEworm) model,
a mechanistic individual-based model of Lumbricus terrestris
populations. Lumbricus terrestris is a dominant earthworm species in
undisturbed habitats and is closely associated with numerous ecosystem
services such as water flow regulation, soil structure and crop
production. In reduced tillage agriculture, a decline in mechanical
disturbance allows for L. terrestris proliferation, whilst the
activities of L. terrestris can replace many of the soil functions
provided by tillage.
3. Extensive EEEworm validation with eight published studies (average
R-2 = .84) demonstrates a mechanistic approach which can extrapolate
between diverse soil, management and weather conditions. EEEworm
simulation experiments elucidate that a combination of direct and
indirect tillage effects leads to population declines in tilled fields,
with litter removal from the soil surface being the main driver.
4. We investigate the effects of different tillage intensities under
historical and projected soil warming conditions and find that future
warmer and drier soils in our simulation exacerbate the effects of deep
ploughing on L. terrestris population declines. These effects result
from warmer and drier soil conditions increasing individual metabolic
rates and tillage reducing food availability to meet energy demands.
5. Synthesis and applications. Pre-emptive strategies to mitigate
climate change impacts on soil health in agroecosystems should focus on
decreasing tillage intensity and retention of crop residues following
tillage. Energy-Environment-Earthworm (EEEworm) has the potential to
benefit land managers, policy makers, risk assessors and regulators by
providing a tool to forecast how soil systems respond to combinations of
land management and environmental change. To allow better cost-benefit
analysis of contrasting land management systems, a future aim of
mechanistic models like EEEworm is to incorporate the links between
earthworm populations, soil functions and ecosystem services.
Tags
Agriculture
Ecosystem services
Earthworm
systems
Model
growth
Consumption
Reproduction
Organic-matter
Litter
Environmental change
Ecosystem engineer
Land
management
Lumbricus terrestris
Soil warming
Tillage
Lumbricus-terrestris l
Biota