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  3. Biodiversity in mountain soils above the treeline.
 

Biodiversity in mountain soils above the treeline.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/89110
Publisher DOI
10.1111/brv.70028
PubMed ID
40369817
Description
Biological diversity in mountain ecosystems has been increasingly studied over the last decade. This is also the case for mountain soils, but no study to date has provided an overall synthesis of the current state of knowledge. Here we fill this gap with a first global analysis of published research on cryptogams, microorganisms, and fauna in mountain soils above the treeline, and a structured synthesis of current knowledge. Based on a corpus of almost 1400 publications and the expertise of 37 mountain soil scientists worldwide, we summarise what is known about the diversity and distribution patterns of each of these organismal groups, specifically along elevation, and provide an overview of available knowledge on the drivers explaining these patterns and their changes. In particular, we document an elevation-dependent decrease in faunal diversity above the treeline, while for cryptogams there is an initial increase above the treeline, followed by a decrease towards the nival belt. Thus, our data confirm the key role that elevation plays in shaping the biodiversity and distribution of these organisms in mountain soils. The response of prokaryote diversity to elevation, in turn, was more diverse, whereas fungal diversity appeared to be substantially influenced by plants. As far as available, we describe key characteristics, adaptations, and functions of mountain soil species, and despite a lack of ecological information about the uncultivated majority of prokaryotes, fungi, and protists, we illustrate the remarkable and unique diversity of life forms and life histories encountered in alpine mountain soils. By applying rule- as well as pattern-based literature-mining approaches and semi-quantitative analyses, we identified hotspots of mountain soil research in the European Alps and Central Asia and revealed significant gaps in taxonomic coverage, particularly among biocrusts, soil protists, and soil fauna. We further report thematic priorities for research on mountain soil biodiversity above the treeline and identify unanswered research questions. Building upon the outcomes of this synthesis, we conclude with a set of research opportunities for mountain soil biodiversity research worldwide. Soils in mountain ecosystems above the treeline fulfil critical functions and make essential contributions to life on land. Accordingly, seizing these opportunities and closing knowledge gaps appears crucial to enable science-based decision making in mountain regions and formulating laws and guidelines in support of mountain soil biodiversity conservation targets.
Date of Publication
2025-10
Publication Type
article
Subject(s)
500 - Science::580 - Plants (Botany)
Keyword(s)
alpine soils
•
bacteria
•
biogeography
•
cryptogams
•
fungi
•
invertebrates
•
lichens
•
microbial diversity
•
protists
•
systematic mapping
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Praeg, Nadine
Steinwandter, Michael
Urbach, Davnah
Institute of Plant Sciences (IPS)
Institute of Plant Sciences, Plant Ecology
Snethlage, Mark A.
Institute of Plant Sciences (IPS)
Institute of Plant Sciences, Plant Ecology
Alves, Rodrigo P
Apple, Martha E
Bilovitz, Peter
Britton, Andrea J
Bruni, Estelle P
Chen, Ting-Wen
Dumack, Kenneth
Fernandez-Mendoza, Fernando
Freppaz, Michele
Frey, Beat
Fromin, Nathalie
Geisen, Stefan
Grube, Martin
Guariento, Elia
Guisan, Antoine
Ji, Qiao-Qiao
Jiménez, Juan J
Maier, Stefanie
Malard, Lucie A
Minor, Maria A
Mc Lean, Cowan C
Mitchell, Edward A D
Peham, Thomas
Pizzolotto, Roberto
Taylor, Andy F S
Vernon, Philippe
van Tol, Johan J
Wu, Donghui
Wu, Yunga
Xie, Zhijing
Weber, Bettina
Illmer, Paul
Seeber, Julia
Additional Credits
Institute of Plant Sciences, Plant Ecology
Institute of Plant Sciences (IPS)
Series
Biological Reviews
Publisher
Wiley
ISSN
1469-185X
1464-7931
Access(Rights)
open.access
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