Deforestation impacts soil biodiversity and ecosystem services worldwide
580
0301 basic medicine
570
Forest conversion
Microbial diversity
Conservation of Natural Resources
Bacteria
Microbiota
Fungal guilds
fungal guilds
Biodiversity
Biological Sciences
Forests
meta-analysis
Meta-analysis
Soil
03 medical and health sciences
global scale
microbial diversity
Global scale
forest conversion
Ecosystem
Soil Microbiology
Soil/chemistry
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2318475121
Publication Date:
2024-03-11T19:01:20Z
AUTHORS (12)
ABSTRACT
Deforestation poses a global threat to biodiversity and its capacity to deliver ecosystem services. Yet, the impacts of deforestation on soil biodiversity and its associated ecosystem services remain virtually unknown. We generated a global dataset including 696 paired-site observations to investigate how native forest conversion to other land uses affects soil properties, biodiversity, and functions associated with the delivery of multiple ecosystem services. The conversion of native forests to plantations, grasslands, and croplands resulted in higher bacterial diversity and more homogeneous fungal communities dominated by pathogens and with a lower abundance of symbionts. Such conversions also resulted in significant reductions in carbon storage, nutrient cycling, and soil functional rates related to organic matter decomposition. Responses of the microbial community to deforestation, including bacterial and fungal diversity and fungal guilds, were predominantly regulated by changes in soil pH and total phosphorus. Moreover, we found that soil fungal diversity and functioning in warmer and wetter native forests is especially vulnerable to deforestation. Our work highlights that the loss of native forests to managed ecosystems poses a major global threat to the biodiversity and functioning of soils and their capacity to deliver ecosystem services.
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