Abstract

Rising to meet global, interconnected challenges, such as food security and ecosystem resilience to global change, requires insights from across the Earth. This is especially true for belowground terrestrial ecological processes. Soil ecologists have answered this call: like mushrooms, large global datasets and databases on soil physics, chemistry and ecology are sprouting up everywhere (e.g. Fine‐Root Ecology Database (Iversen et al., 2018), FunFun (Zanne et al., 2020), GlobalFungi (Větrovský et al., 2020), COntinuous SOil REspiration (Jian et al., 2020), Global distribution of earthworm diversity (Philips et al., 2019) etc.). It is now time to leverage synergies among these datasets to link the continuum of belowground processes to ecosystem functions (e.g. decomposition, nutrient cycling and soil respiration). Built on interdisciplinary and international collaborations, data synthesis that leads to a holistic understanding is one of the best ways of predicting the future of terrestrial ecosystems and for preserving ecosystem services under global change. In 2020, global interconnectedness was on display as we saw a pandemic sweep across the world in weeks. The pandemic allowed the Ecological Society of America (ESA) to enter a new digital era by holding a fully virtual conference. While technology cannot yet replicate all aspects of an in‐person conference, the virtual platform increased accessibility and reduced the climate impact of the annual conference. It also provided an opportunity for early‐career plant and microbial ecologists from five ESA Organized Oral Sessions and one Inspire Session to organize Ecology Underground, a two‐day program of live virtual talks and open discussions on integrative belowground ecology on 4 and 5 August 2020. Ecology Underground was sponsored by New Phytologist, the ESA Soil Ecology Section, the US Department of Energy, Biological and Environmental Research program and the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE), and gathered 453 participants over two days. The online platform allowed for participation across the globe (37 countries were represented; Fig. 1) and was an opportunity to think creatively about how scientific discussions and global collaborations can take place, now and in the future. Open in a separate window Fig. 1 The online platform of Ecology Underground allowed for participation across the globe.

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