University of Reading Research Data Archive

Soil invertebrate and mycorrhizal activity in diverse grasslands: benefits for ecosystem service provision - PhD thesis dataset

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Data collected for PhD thesis. The thesis aim was to identify which of the commercially viable grasslands within the Diverse Forages Project had the most positive effect on the soil biota (earthworms, mesofauna and AMF) and whether changes in belowground biota affected aboveground biomass productivity. The thesis consists of three manuscript research chapters which address the soil biodiversity research gaps identified by comparing a conventionally fertilised forage pasture to three commercially available diverse grasslands.
Chapter 2 covered the changes in soil invertebrates, namely earthworms, a selection of soil mesofauna under grazed systems, and measuring arbuscular mycorrhizal (AMF) activity through trap plant root colonisation.
Chapter 3 looked at overall fungal community diversity and microbial functional diversity, with modelling effects on provisioning ecosystem service delivery of aboveground biomass.
And finally, Chapter 4 focused solely on AMF community’s contribution to the commercially available diverse grasslands in dry, stressed environments, suggestive of future climate change conditions.

Resource Type: Dataset
Creators: Shepperd, Sarah ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7784-424X
Rights-holders: University of Reading
Data Publisher: University of Reading
Publication Year: 2023
Data last accessed: 18 April 2024
DOI: https://doi.org/10.17864/1947.000514
Metadata Record URL: https://researchdata.reading.ac.uk/id/eprint/514
Organisational units: Life Sciences > School of Agriculture, Policy and Development > Department of Sustainable Land Management
Participating Organisations: University of Reading
Rights:
Data Availability: OPEN

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