Abstract

Summary Livestock grazing influences plant community structure, soil quality and health, and is likely to also affect the populations and diversity of soil biota. In our study, we determined the abundance and family level diversity of soil mites under very heavy and light grazing regimes, and a very heavy grazing exclosure, and asked whether there were differences in abundance of mite taxa that reflected the severity of disturbance. The field experiment we sampled was established in 1949 on a Rough Fescue Prairie with Orthic Black Chernozemic (Udic Haploboroll) soils near Stavely Alberta Canada. Soil cores were taken from the light (L)(1.2 AUM (animal unit month) ha –1 ) and very heavy (VH) (4.8 AUM ha –1 ) grazing regimes and the grazing recovery exclosure (Ex) in the very heavy grazing site in June and October 1999. The results showed that the soil temperature, moisture and bulk density varied between the grazing regimes, soil depth and the sampling times. Collembola were not abundant at any of the sites compared with Acari. Among Acari, prostigmatid mites were significantly more abundant in VH site and all the grazing treatments at both depths and sampling times. Oribatida, and to a lesser extent Mesostigmata, were more closely associated with reduced and undisturbed habitats than the Prostigmata, and there was a positive relationship between increased grassland productivity and the abundance and diversity of soil microarthropods. Our results suggest that Acari are sensitive to soil disturbance.

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