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Title: INTERACTIVE EFFECTS OF NATIVE AND EXOTIC EARTHWORMS ON RESOURCE USE AND NUTRIENT MINERALIZATION IN A TROPICAL WET FOREST SOIL OF PUERTO RICO.

Author
item Weyers, Sharon
item HENDRIX, P - UNVIERSITY OF GEORGIA
item ZOU, X - UNIVERSITY OF PUERTO RICO

Submitted to: Biology and Fertility of Soils
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 3/7/2002
Publication Date: 8/1/2002
Citation: Lachnicht Weyers, S.L., Hendrix, P.F., Zou, X. 2002. Interactive effects of native and exotic earthworms on resource use and nutrient mineralization in a tropical wet forest soil of puerto rico.. Biology and Fertility of Soils. v. 36. p. 43-52.

Interpretive Summary: Laboratory scale comparisons of a native and an exotic species of tropical earthworm were made using earthworms collected in a Puerto Rican rainforest. The exotic earthworm caused greater production and release (mineralization) of inorganic nitrogen and inorganic carbon (carbon dioxide) from soil organic forms. The exotic earthworm had a greater affect on turnover (through ingestion and transport) of soil carbon. The effect of the exotic earthworms on mineralization and turnover was reduced in the presence of the native earthworms. Exotic earthworms have a large potential for influencing nutrient cycling and might alter the ecosystem, but the presence of native earthworms may mitigate this effect.

Technical Abstract: Investigation of single or mixed assemblages of native Estherella sp. and exotic Pontoscolex corethrurus from a rain forest in Puerto Rico was undertaken to understand resource use patterns, and linkages with C and N mineralization in a 19-day incubation. Resource use was explored with addition of 15N-enriched leaf litter and 13C-enriched glucose to reconstructed organic and mineral soil horizons. Juvenile Estherella sp. became at least 6.06 per mil more enriched in 13C than sub-adult Estherella sp. or adult P. corethrurus. Sub-adult Estherella sp. became more than 3.6 per mil enriched in 13C over P. corethrurus. Delta 15N acquired by P. corethrurus was greater by 0.83-1.56 per mil in the mixed species than the single-species assemblages. Delta 15N of sub-adult Estherella sp. was enriched by 0.73-0.81 per mil over juvenile Estherella sp. in the single-species assemblage. Net immobilization of N occurred in the organic layer of all 15N-enriched treatments. Net N mineralization in mineral soil layers was significantly greater in microcosms with P. corethrurus than in those containing only Estherella sp.. Cumulative respiration was greatest in P. corethrurus assemblages, however, assemblages with only Estherella sp. released more 13C in respiration. P. corethrurus assimilated different N resources when incubated with, as compared to without, native Estherella sp.. Delta 13C and delta 15N signatures acquired by assimilation of 13C and 15N differed by species, developmental stage, and competitive interactions. The results showed that alone, exotic P. corethrurus induced higher mineralization rates than native Estherella sp., but that the interaction of exotic and native species impinged on resource use by P. corethrurus, reducing the effect of the exotic on C and N mineralization. Invasion of exotic P. corethrurus may change the mineralization potentials of C and N and their biogeochemical cycling in soils.