{"type": "FeatureCollection", "features": [{"id": "10.1007/s11104-021-04970-5", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:14:53Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2021-04-30", "title": "Grazing impacts on ecosystem functions exceed those from mowing", "description": "Land use change due to the increasing anthropogenic activities is the most important driver leading to alteration of multiple ecosystem functions. Overgrazing is thought to be one of most pervasive and significant degrading processes in grasslands, but direct comparisons with other comparable drivers of land use intensification are lacking. Our results aimed to test how single land use practices (grazing, mowing), and combined land use practices (both grazing and mowing), influence biodiversity, soils and plant function, and the coupling of aboveground and belowground functions and properties in a Eurasian steppe grassland. We examined changes in individual functions associated with aboveground and belowground plant and soil compartments, and multiple combined functions (hereafter \u2018multifunctionality\u2019) at 317 sites along an extensive climatic gradient in Northern China. Further, we investigated the correlations (coupling) between aboveground and belowground processes under the three land use scenarios. We found a mixture of effects of grazing, mowing and mowing plus grazing. However, values of many aboveground and belowground attributes were lower when sites were grazed. Although grazed sites had lower values of soil carbon and nutrients, there were no grazing-induced changes in root carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus. More importantly, the most intense land use scenario (grazing combined with mowing) decoupled the correlations between belowground and aboveground functions compared with that of single land uses. Our study demonstrates that mowing is a better long-term management method than grazing for semi-natural grasslands in the Eurasian steppe are heavily grazed. Our results demonstrate that additional land use pressures imposed when mowing and grazing are applied together can decouple the positive associations between plant richness and functions. This knowledge is critical if we are to adopt strategies to maintain diverse grassland ecosystems and the important services and functions that they provide.", "keywords": ["2. Zero hunger", "0106 biological sciences", "Mowing", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "Ecolog\u00eda", "15. Life on land", "01 natural sciences", "Ecosystem functions", "Grazing", "Plant diversity", "Eurasian grassland", "13. Climate action", "XXXXXX - Unknown", "Multifunctionality", "Ecosystem services", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-021-04970-5"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Plant%20and%20Soil", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.1007/s11104-021-04970-5", "name": "item", "description": "10.1007/s11104-021-04970-5", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.1007/s11104-021-04970-5"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2021-04-30T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.1016/bs.aecr.2019.06.001", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:15:08Z", "type": "Report", "created": "2019-07-23", "title": "A multitrophic perspective on biodiversity\u2013ecosystem functioning research", "description": "Concern about the functional consequences of unprecedented loss in biodiversity has prompted biodiversity-ecosystem functioning (BEF) research to become one of the most active fields of ecological research in the past 25 years. Hundreds of experiments have manipulated biodiversity as an independent variable and found compelling support that the functioning of ecosystems increases with the diversity of their ecological communities. This research has also identified some of the mechanisms underlying BEF relationships, some context-dependencies of the strength of relationships, as well as implications for various ecosystem services that mankind depends upon. In this paper, we argue that a multitrophic perspective of biotic interactions in random and non-random biodiversity change scenarios is key to advance future BEF research and to address some of its most important remaining challenges. We discuss that the study and the quantification of multitrophic interactions in space and time facilitates scaling up from small-scale biodiversity manipulations and ecosystem function assessments to management-relevant spatial scales across ecosystem boundaries. We specifically consider multitrophic conceptual frameworks to understand and predict the context-dependency of BEF relationships. Moreover, we highlight the importance of the eco-evolutionary underpinnings of multitrophic BEF relationships. We outline that FAIR data (meeting the standards of findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability) and reproducible processing will be key to advance this field of research by making it more integrative. Finally, we show how these BEF insights may be implemented for ecosystem management, society, and policy. Given that human well-being critically depends on the multiple services provided by diverse, multitrophic communities, integrating the approaches of evolutionary ecology, community ecology, and ecosystem ecology in future BEF research will be key to refine conservation targets and develop sustainable management strategies.", "keywords": ["580", "Biodiversity change", "0301 basic medicine", "570", "0303 health sciences", "Geography & travel", "577", "Food web", "Spatial scaling", "910", "15. Life on land", "ddc:910", "Ecosystem functions", "Management", "[SDE.BE] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology", "03 medical and health sciences", "Eco-evolution", "13. Climate action", "11. Sustainability", "Multifunctionality", "Landscape", "info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/910", "[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology", "Real-world biodiversity change"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.aecr.2019.06.001"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.1016/bs.aecr.2019.06.001", "name": "item", "description": "10.1016/bs.aecr.2019.06.001", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.1016/bs.aecr.2019.06.001"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2019-01-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.1111/geb.13273", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:18:42Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2021-02-21", "title": "Global projections of the soil microbiome in the Anthropocene", "description": "AbstractAim<p>Soil microbes are essential for maintenance of life\uffe2\uff80\uff90supporting ecosystem services, but projections of how these microbes will be affected by global change scenarios are lacking. Therefore, our aim was to provide projections of future soil microbial distribution using several scenarios of global change.</p>Location<p>Global.</p>Time period<p>1950\uffe2\uff80\uff932090.</p>Major taxa studied<p>Bacteria and fungi.</p>Methods<p>We used a global database of soil microbial communities across six continents to estimate past and future trends of the soil microbiome. To do so, we used structural equation models to include the direct and indirect effects of changes in climate and land use in our predictions, using current climate (temperature and precipitation) and land\uffe2\uff80\uff90use projections between 1950 and 2090.</p>Results<p>Local bacterial richness will increase in all scenarios of change in climate and land use considered, although this increase will be followed by a generalized community homogenization process affecting &gt;\uffc2\uffa085% of terrestrial ecosystems. Changes in the relative abundance of functional genes associated with the increases in bacterial richness are also expected. Based on an ecological cluster analysis, our results suggest that phylotypes such asGeodermatophilusspp. (typical desert bacteria),Mycobacteriumsp. (which are known to include important human pathogens),Streptomyces mirabilis(major producers of antibiotic resistance genes) or potential fungal soil\uffe2\uff80\uff90borne plant pathogens belonging to Ascomycota fungi (Venturiaspp.,Devriesiaspp.) will become more abundant in their communities.</p>Main conclusions<p>Our results provide evidence that climate change has a stronger influence on soil microbial communities than change in land use (often including deforestation and agricultural expansion), although most of the effects of climate are indirect, through other environmental variables (e.g., changes in soil pH). The same was found for microbial functions such as the prevalence of phosphate transport genes. We provide reliable predictions about the changes in the global distribution of microbial communities, showing an increase in alpha diversity and a homogenization of soil microbial communities in the Anthropocene.</p", "keywords": ["0301 basic medicine", "2. Zero hunger", "570", "Soil macroecology", "0303 health sciences", "550", "572", "ddc:572", "Soil bacteria", "Ecolog\u00eda", "15. Life on land", "Article", "Ecosystem functions", "Future of nature", "03 medical and health sciences", "13. Climate action", "XXXXXX - Unknown", "11. Sustainability", "Biodiversity projections", "ddc:570", "Soil governance"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/geb.13273"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13273"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Global%20Ecology%20and%20Biogeography", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.1111/geb.13273", "name": "item", "description": "10.1111/geb.13273", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.1111/geb.13273"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2021-02-19T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.25674/so92iss2pp121", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:20:35Z", "type": "Journal Article", "title": "Lessons from the WBF2020: extrinsic and intrinsic value of soil organisms", "description": "Following our participation in the first World Biodiversity Forum in Davos, Switzerland, we provide a summary of the main themes of the conference, as well as an overview of the session that was focused on soil biodiversity. One of the main themes of the conference was the valuation of biodiversity and what contributes to the value of biodiversity. In this article we explore whether we should move away from the notion that we can only 'sell' soil biodiversity based on the function and services it provides, and rather shift towards valuing soil biodiversity based on its intrinsic value and our relationship with it.", "keywords": ["0301 basic medicine", "0303 health sciences", "ecosystem functions and services", "Biodiversity", "15. Life on land", "Microbiology", "QR1-502", "03 medical and health sciences", "QL1-991", "13. Climate action", "intrinsic value", "world biodiversity forum", "Zoology", "valuing soil biodiversity", "Taxonomy"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10.25674/so92iss2pp121"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Soil%20organisms", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.25674/so92iss2pp121", "name": "item", "description": "10.25674/so92iss2pp121", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.25674/so92iss2pp121"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2020-01-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10261/336421", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:24:32Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2019-05-12", "title": "Losses in microbial functional diversity reduce the rate of key soil processes", "description": "Open AccessThis work was financially supported by the Australian Research Council (DP 170104634 and DP190103714) and Western Sydney University. We gratefully acknowledge Dr. Jasmine Grinyer for her assistance during experimental setup and providing comments to improve the quality of this manuscript. M. D-B. acknowledges support from the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions of the Horizon 2020 Framework Programme H2020-MSCA-IF-2016 under REA grant agreement n\u00b0 702057.", "keywords": ["Functional redundancy", "microbial diversity", "XXXXXX - Unknown", "nutrient cycles", "Microbial functional diversity", "15. Life on land", "ecosystems", "Specialized ecosystem functions", "soils", "Nutrient cycling"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/10261/336421"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Soil%20Biology%20and%20Biochemistry", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10261/336421", "name": "item", "description": "10261/336421", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10261/336421"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2019-08-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "2944126466", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:25:43Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2019-05-12", "title": "Losses in microbial functional diversity reduce the rate of key soil processes", "description": "Open AccessThis work was financially supported by the Australian Research Council (DP 170104634 and DP190103714) and Western Sydney University. We gratefully acknowledge Dr. Jasmine Grinyer for her assistance during experimental setup and providing comments to improve the quality of this manuscript. M. D-B. acknowledges support from the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions of the Horizon 2020 Framework Programme H2020-MSCA-IF-2016 under REA grant agreement n\u00b0 702057.", "keywords": ["Functional redundancy", "microbial diversity", "XXXXXX - Unknown", "nutrient cycles", "Microbial functional diversity", "15. Life on land", "ecosystems", "Specialized ecosystem functions", "soils", "Nutrient cycling"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/2944126466"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Soil%20Biology%20and%20Biochemistry", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "2944126466", "name": "item", "description": "2944126466", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/2944126466"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2019-08-01T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "1959.7/uws:64812", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:25:07Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2021-02-21", "title": "Global projections of the soil microbiome in the Anthropocene", "description": "AbstractAim<p>Soil microbes are essential for maintenance of life\uffe2\uff80\uff90supporting ecosystem services, but projections of how these microbes will be affected by global change scenarios are lacking. Therefore, our aim was to provide projections of future soil microbial distribution using several scenarios of global change.</p>Location<p>Global.</p>Time period<p>1950\uffe2\uff80\uff932090.</p>Major taxa studied<p>Bacteria and fungi.</p>Methods<p>We used a global database of soil microbial communities across six continents to estimate past and future trends of the soil microbiome. To do so, we used structural equation models to include the direct and indirect effects of changes in climate and land use in our predictions, using current climate (temperature and precipitation) and land\uffe2\uff80\uff90use projections between 1950 and 2090.</p>Results<p>Local bacterial richness will increase in all scenarios of change in climate and land use considered, although this increase will be followed by a generalized community homogenization process affecting &gt;\uffc2\uffa085% of terrestrial ecosystems. Changes in the relative abundance of functional genes associated with the increases in bacterial richness are also expected. Based on an ecological cluster analysis, our results suggest that phylotypes such asGeodermatophilusspp. (typical desert bacteria),Mycobacteriumsp. (which are known to include important human pathogens),Streptomyces mirabilis(major producers of antibiotic resistance genes) or potential fungal soil\uffe2\uff80\uff90borne plant pathogens belonging to Ascomycota fungi (Venturiaspp.,Devriesiaspp.) will become more abundant in their communities.</p>Main conclusions<p>Our results provide evidence that climate change has a stronger influence on soil microbial communities than change in land use (often including deforestation and agricultural expansion), although most of the effects of climate are indirect, through other environmental variables (e.g., changes in soil pH). The same was found for microbial functions such as the prevalence of phosphate transport genes. We provide reliable predictions about the changes in the global distribution of microbial communities, showing an increase in alpha diversity and a homogenization of soil microbial communities in the Anthropocene.</p", "keywords": ["0301 basic medicine", "2. Zero hunger", "570", "Soil macroecology", "0303 health sciences", "info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/572", "550", "572", "ddc:572", "Soil bacteria", "Ecolog\u00eda", "15. Life on land", "Article", "Ecosystem functions", "Future of nature", "03 medical and health sciences", "13. Climate action", "XXXXXX - Unknown", "11. Sustainability", "Biodiversity projections", "ddc:570", "Soil governance"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/geb.13273"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/1959.7/uws:64812"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Global%20Ecology%20and%20Biogeography", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "1959.7/uws:64812", "name": "item", "description": "1959.7/uws:64812", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/1959.7/uws:64812"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2021-02-19T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "1959.7/uws:65605", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:25:07Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2021-04-30", "title": "Grazing impacts on ecosystem functions exceed those from mowing", "description": "Land use change due to the increasing anthropogenic activities is the most important driver leading to alteration of multiple ecosystem functions. Overgrazing is thought to be one of most pervasive and significant degrading processes in grasslands, but direct comparisons with other comparable drivers of land use intensification are lacking. Our results aimed to test how single land use practices (grazing, mowing), and combined land use practices (both grazing and mowing), influence biodiversity, soils and plant function, and the coupling of aboveground and belowground functions and properties in a Eurasian steppe grassland. We examined changes in individual functions associated with aboveground and belowground plant and soil compartments, and multiple combined functions (hereafter \u2018multifunctionality\u2019) at 317 sites along an extensive climatic gradient in Northern China. Further, we investigated the correlations (coupling) between aboveground and belowground processes under the three land use scenarios. We found a mixture of effects of grazing, mowing and mowing plus grazing. However, values of many aboveground and belowground attributes were lower when sites were grazed. Although grazed sites had lower values of soil carbon and nutrients, there were no grazing-induced changes in root carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus. More importantly, the most intense land use scenario (grazing combined with mowing) decoupled the correlations between belowground and aboveground functions compared with that of single land uses. Our study demonstrates that mowing is a better long-term management method than grazing for semi-natural grasslands in the Eurasian steppe are heavily grazed. Our results demonstrate that additional land use pressures imposed when mowing and grazing are applied together can decouple the positive associations between plant richness and functions. This knowledge is critical if we are to adopt strategies to maintain diverse grassland ecosystems and the important services and functions that they provide.", "keywords": ["2. Zero hunger", "0106 biological sciences", "Mowing", "04 agricultural and veterinary sciences", "Ecolog\u00eda", "15. Life on land", "01 natural sciences", "Ecosystem functions", "Grazing", "Plant diversity", "Eurasian grassland", "13. Climate action", "XXXXXX - Unknown", "Multifunctionality", "Ecosystem services", "0401 agriculture", " forestry", " and fisheries"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://doi.org/1959.7/uws:65605"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Plant%20and%20Soil", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "1959.7/uws:65605", "name": "item", "description": "1959.7/uws:65605", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/1959.7/uws:65605"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2021-04-30T00:00:00Z"}}], "links": [{"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "This document as GeoJSON", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items?keywords=Ecosystem+functions&f=json", "hreflang": "en-US"}, {"rel": "alternate", "type": "text/html", "title": "This document as HTML", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items?keywords=Ecosystem+functions&f=html", "hreflang": "en-US"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection URL", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main", "hreflang": "en-US"}, {"type": "application/geo+json", "rel": "first", "title": "items (first)", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items?keywords=Ecosystem+functions&", "hreflang": "en-US"}, {"rel": "last", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "items (last)", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items?keywords=Ecosystem+functions&offset=8", "hreflang": "en-US"}], "numberMatched": 8, "numberReturned": 8, "distributedFeatures": [], "timeStamp": "2026-05-25T22:06:08.073590Z"}