Abstract

Soil/litter inhabiting annelids and arthropods were studied for one year in a mesic deciduous woodland, Andersby ängsbackar, one of the most northerly areas in Sweden to possess unbroken oak/hazel vegetation. Lumbricidae, Enchytraeidae, Collembola, Acari, Coleoptera, Diptera and Araneae were important faunal groups with regard to abundance, biomass and respiratory metabolism. Annual mean biomass (8 g dw m−2) and respiration (450 kJ m −2 yr−1) of the joint annelid and arthropod community were dominated by lumbricids (76 and 50%, respectively). The biomass and respiration of the annelids and arthropods at Andersby were lower than in some other oak forests in northwestern Europe, probably because of lower soil temperature, lower litter supply and because some lumbricid and diplopod species were at their northern border of distribution.Of the annual respiration, saprovores, fungivores, carnivores and root‐feeders contributed 65, 19, 14 and 1.5%, respectively. The saprovore percentage was lower at Andersby than at other mull sites compared, probably as an effect of the northern climate, which might favour microbial saprovory. The fungivore and carnivore percentages were higher, which might be due to the presence of a litter layer throughout the year.

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