Title of article
Soil ecosystem engineering by the train millipede Parafontaria laminata in a Japanese larch forest
Author/Authors
Toyota، نويسنده , , Ayu and Kaneko، نويسنده , , Nobuhiro and Ito، نويسنده , , Masamichi T.، نويسنده ,
Pages
11
From page
1840
To page
1850
Abstract
Periodic swarming by adult train millipedes Parafontaria laminata (Attems, 1909) occurs in central Japan on an 8-year cycle, and the emergence of new adults is highly predictable. Millipede biomass reaches a maximum and feeding habits change upon the emergence of adults. Larvae are geophagous while adults feed on both litter and soil. We hypothesized that the shift in the developmental stages of P. laminata influenced the carbon dynamics in the soil and conducted a field mesocosm experiment in a larch plantation forest over 2 years (1999 and 2000) using three developmental stages: sixth- and seventh-instar larvae and adults. By experimentally manipulating millipede density at four levels, we obtained the following results: larvae were geophagous, while adults consumed both litter and soil (mixed-feeding) and consequently showed stronger density effects on litter decomposition rates than larvae; adult activities in the high-density treatment increased soil microbial biomass but not at low adult densities or at the larval stages; and adults increased the carbon accumulation in soil layers especially at high densities due to their mixed-feeding on litter and soil. We determined that due to synchronized postembryonic development with high densities and changes in feeding habits, the train millipede periodically sequestered carbon in this forest.
Keywords
Soil carbon sequestration , Soil organic matter , Diplopoda , Feeding shift , Litter decomposition , Soil microbial biomass
Journal title
Astroparticle Physics
Record number
1996121
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