生物多样性
生态系统服务
生态系统
物种丰富度
生态学
陆地生态系统
背景(考古学)
表土
生物多样性热点
环境科学
地理
土壤水分
生物
考古
作者
Carlos A. Guerra,Miguel Berdugo,David J. Eldridge,Nico Eisenhauer,Brajesh K. Singh,Haiying Cui,Sebastián Abades,Fernando D. Alfaro,Adebola R. Bamigboye,Felipe Bastida,José Luis Blanco‐Pastor,Asunción de los Rı́os,Jorge Durán,Tine Grebenc,Javier Gutiérrez Illán,Yu‐Rong Liu,Thulani P. Makhalanyane,Steven D. Mamet,Marco A. Molina‐Montenegro,José L. Moreno
出处
期刊:Nature
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2022-10-12
卷期号:610 (7933): 693-698
被引量:118
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-022-05292-x
摘要
Soils are the foundation of all terrestrial ecosystems1. However, unlike for plants and animals, a global assessment of hotspots for soil nature conservation is still lacking2. This hampers our ability to establish nature conservation priorities for the multiple dimensions that support the soil system: from soil biodiversity to ecosystem services. Here, to identify global hotspots for soil nature conservation, we performed a global field survey that includes observations of biodiversity (archaea, bacteria, fungi, protists and invertebrates) and functions (critical for six ecosystem services) in 615 composite samples of topsoil from a standardized survey in all continents. We found that each of the different ecological dimensions of soils—that is, species richness (alpha diversity, measured as amplicon sequence variants), community dissimilarity and ecosystem services—peaked in contrasting regions of the planet, and were associated with different environmental factors. Temperate ecosystems showed the highest species richness, whereas community dissimilarity peaked in the tropics, and colder high-latitudinal ecosystems were identified as hotspots of ecosystem services. These findings highlight the complexities that are involved in simultaneously protecting multiple ecological dimensions of soil. We further show that most of these hotspots are not adequately covered by protected areas (more than 70%), and are vulnerable in the context of several scenarios of global change. Our global estimation of priorities for soil nature conservation highlights the importance of accounting for the multidimensionality of soil biodiversity and ecosystem services to conserve soils for future generations. A global field survey that analyses samples of soil from all continents identifies hotspots for soil nature conservation, and shows that different ecological dimensions of soil are associated with different priority areas for conservation.
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