Abstract
Climate warming is a key factor driving species range shifts. While previous work has focused on shifts of aboveground plant communities, changes in climate and vegetation should affect soil communities and hence ecosystem-level nutrient cycling and ecosystem functioning. High alpine ecosystems are particularly sensitive to climate warming because snow is among the main drivers of ecosystem structure and function. Climate-warming snow cover changes at Niwot Ridge in the Colorado Rocky Mountains have resulted in a consistent plant colonization of previously unvegetated soils generating a natural gradient of soil habitats ranging from unvegetated to increasingly vegetated. We used this gradient of plant communities at different successional stages to determine if nematodes respond to climate-driven changes in this high-alpine landscape and if they play a role in changes in soil C and N. We hypothesized that: 1) there would be clear shifts in nematode communities along the gradient as a function of snow cover, plant richness and density, and water holding capacity but that these shifts would be dependent on nematode feeding habits and their positioning in the soil foodweb and 2) the shifts would be associated with accumulating soil C and N. To test these hypotheses, we measured nematodes, plants, and soil microbes, snow cover, pH, soil water holding capacity, and different forms of soil C and N in 98 plots across the plant successional gradient. As predicted, nematode communities exhibited extensive shifts from a few individuals of a single species in unvegetated soils to hundreds of individuals and tens of species within every feeding group under complex plant communities. Representatives of omnivorous and bacterivorous K-strategists preceded plants and plant parasites and root associates depended on plants most. Linear regression models indicated that plants, microbial communities and soil water holding capacity, but not snow cover, were the most predictive factors of nematode diversity and density across all trophic levels and that all nematode groups were positively related to all measures of soil C and N. Structural equation models confirmed these results, but also indicated that effects of climate warming on nematodes were indirect primarily through shifts in plant and microbial communities and changes of soil water holding capacity. Moreover, nematode trophic group densities, but not their diversity, played a potential role in the accumulation of soil N, and to a lesser degree of soil C. Because nematode communities at Niwot Ridge are largely at their early phases of assembly, with continuing climate warming, we predict their increasing abundance and diversity will likely continue, as will their impact on soil C and N processes.
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