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Article Dans Une Revue European Journal of Soil Science Année : 2004

Soil invertebrate activity in biological crusts on tropical inselbergs

Résumé

Granite inselbergs protrude from forest and savanna in the tropics. They are exposed to harsh climates (alternation of heavy rain and severe drought) and provide little nutrient for plants. Soil animals and humus components were investigated in cyanobacterial crusts close to patches of epilithic vegetation on the surface of the Nouragues inselberg (French Guiana). Three biological crust samples, corresponding to bromeliacean carpets of increasing size (supposed of increasing age), were sampled for faunal and micromorphological studies. Arthropods (mainly mites and insects) were abundant and highly diversified, the more so after enchytraeid worms ate and transformed the cyanobacterial mass. Below the superficial cyanobacterial crust, humus was made of a loose assemblage of enchytraeid faeces where these animals were present, or of a compact assemblage of cyanobacteria and amorphous organic matter where mites were the dominant animal group. Roots abounded in the humified part of the crust. We conclude that soil invertebrates, in particular enchytraeid worms, are important for the accumulation of organic matter on granite outcrops, and so therefore for the encroachment of plant succession.

Domaines

Science des sols
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Dates et versions

hal-00497120 , version 1 (02-07-2010)

Identifiants

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Anne Vaçulik, Charlotte Kounda-Kiki, Corinne Sarthou, Jean-François Ponge. Soil invertebrate activity in biological crusts on tropical inselbergs. European Journal of Soil Science, 2004, 55 (3), pp.539-549. ⟨10.1111/j.1365-2389.2004.00615.x⟩. ⟨hal-00497120⟩

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