2023
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.10392
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Mammal traits and soil biogeochemistry: Functional diversity relates to composition of soil organic matter

María Losada,
Mar Sobral,
Kirsten M. Silvius
et al.

Abstract: Mammal diversity affects carbon concentration in Amazonian soils. It is known that some species traits determine carbon accumulation in organisms (e.g., size and longevity), and are also related to feeding strategies, thus linking species traits to the type of organic remains that are incorporated into the soil. Trait diversity in mammal assemblages – that is, its functional diversity – may therefore constitute another mechanism linking biodiversity to soil organic matter (SOM) accumulation. To address this hy… Show more

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“…Specifically, we gathered the following traits for each species: (i) body mass (Wilman et al., 2014), (ii) diet (Wilman et al., 2014), (iii) adult snout‐to‐vent length (Myhrvold et al., 2015), (iv) litter size (Myhrvold et al., 2015), and (v) generation length (estimated from information on species age at first reproduction and reproductive life span; Pacifici et al., 2013). Data about these functional traits are widely available for most species, providing fundamental information about their biology, the generational replacement time, their vulnerability to being threatened, and the role they perform in ecosystems (Chichorro et al., 2019, 2022; Losada et al., 2023).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifically, we gathered the following traits for each species: (i) body mass (Wilman et al., 2014), (ii) diet (Wilman et al., 2014), (iii) adult snout‐to‐vent length (Myhrvold et al., 2015), (iv) litter size (Myhrvold et al., 2015), and (v) generation length (estimated from information on species age at first reproduction and reproductive life span; Pacifici et al., 2013). Data about these functional traits are widely available for most species, providing fundamental information about their biology, the generational replacement time, their vulnerability to being threatened, and the role they perform in ecosystems (Chichorro et al., 2019, 2022; Losada et al., 2023).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%