Summary
Soil invertebrates suffer from contamination of the soil by heavy metals. We have studied the effects of contamination by cadmium, zinc and lead on their communities in soils in northern France by comparing polluted land with non‐contaminated sites. We have followed the seasonal variations and effects of soil properties. Saprophagous invertebrates (Diplopoda, Isopoda) and Chilopoda were sampled by pitfall‐trapping from February to November in fairly contaminated areas. In addition, a Berlese extraction of the litter in two very highly contaminated sites was conducted during autumn; animals were also trapped during June in the same locations. The most active period for myriapods was spring (April and May), whereas isopods were abundant from April to the end of summer. No clear relation was found relating dominant species or number of myriapods or isopods to concentration of heavy metal in the little‐contaminated soils. The dominant species seemed not to be related to pollution but to vegetation or soil characteristics. In the most contaminated sites, with metalliferous grassland and a thick undecomposed litter layer, a threshold in contamination values seemed to be reached: no isopods or millipedes were found, but only Chilopoda and Symphyla.
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