“…EcoPlate data offer an opportunity for comparative studies among forest types and for testing community ecology and ecosystem function hypotheses at broad spatial scales (e.g., testing for a latitudinal gradient in multifunctionality in soil microbial communities and elucidating the relative importance of microbial communities in forest ecosystem function). The data can also be analyzed together with the results of associated projects in the same plots (e.g., tree census, Ishihara et al, 2011; litter fall, Suzuki et al, 2012; ground‐dwelling beetles, Niwa et al, 2016; tea bag decomposition, Suzuki et al, 2019; herbivory, Takafumi et al, 2021). Furthermore, if the EcoPlate is remeasured at the same plots in a few years or decades, we can assess the impact of recent climate change on soil microbial communities.…”