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Dive into the research topics where Katja Steinauer is active.

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Featured researches published by Katja Steinauer.


Ecology | 2015

Plant diversity effects on soil microbial functions and enzymes are stronger than warming in a grassland experiment

Katja Steinauer; G. David Tilman; Peter D. Wragg; Simone Cesarz; Jane M. Cowles; Karin Pritsch; Peter B. Reich; Wolfgang W. Weisser; Nico Eisenhauer

Anthropogenic changes in biodiversity and atmospheric temperature significantly influence ecosystem processes. However, little is known about potential interactive effects of plant diversity and warming on essential ecosystem properties, such as soil microbial functions and element cycling. We studied the effects of orthogonal manipulations of plant diversity (one, four, and 16 species) and warming (ambient, +1.5 degrees C, and +3 degrees C) on soil microbial biomass, respiration, growth after nutrient additions, and activities of extracellular enzymes in 2011 and 2012 in the BAC (biodiversity and climate) perennial grassland experiment site at Cedar Creek, Minnesota, USA. Focal enzymes are involved in essential biogeochemical processes of the carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus cycles. Soil microbial biomass and some enzyme activities involved in the C and N cycle increased significantly with increasing plant diversity in both years. In addition, 16-species mixtures buffered warming induced reductions in topsoil water content. We found no interactive effects of plant diversity and warming on soil microbial biomass and growth rates. However, the activity of several enzymes (1,4-beta-glucosidase, 1,4-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, phosphatase, peroxidase) depended on interactions between plant diversity and warming with elevated activities of enzymes involved in the C, N, and P cycles at both high plant diversity and high warming levels. Increasing plant diversity consistently decreased microbial biomass-specific enzyme activities and altered soil microbial growth responses to nutrient additions, indicating that plant diversity changed nutrient limitations and/or microbial community composition. In contrast to our expectations, higher plant diversity only buffered temperature effects on soil water content, but not on microbial functions. Temperature effects on some soil enzymes were greatest at high plant diversity. In total, our results suggest that the fundamental temperature ranges of soil microbial communities may be sufficiently broad to buffer their functioning against changes in temperature and that plant diversity may be a dominant control of soil microbial processes in a changing world.


Nature Communications | 2015

Flooding disturbances increase resource availability and productivity but reduce stability in diverse plant communities

Alexandra J. Wright; Anne Ebeling; Hans de Kroon; Christiane Roscher; Alexandra Weigelt; Nina Buchmann; Tina Buchmann; Christine Fischer; Nina Hacker; Anke Hildebrandt; Sophia Leimer; Liesje Mommer; Yvonne Oelmann; Stefan Scheu; Katja Steinauer; Tanja Strecker; Wolfgang W. Weisser; Wolfgang Wilcke; Nico Eisenhauer

The natural world is increasingly defined by change. Within the next 100 years, rising atmospheric CO₂ concentrations will continue to increase the frequency and magnitude of extreme weather events. Simultaneously, human activities are reducing global biodiversity, with current extinction rates at ~1,000 × what they were before human domination of Earths ecosystems. The co-occurrence of these trends may be of particular concern, as greater biological diversity could help ecosystems resist change during large perturbations. We use data from a 200-year flood event to show that when a disturbance is associated with an increase in resource availability, the opposite may occur. Flooding was associated with increases in productivity and decreases in stability, particularly in the highest diversity communities. Our results undermine the utility of the biodiversity-stability hypothesis during a large number of disturbances where resource availability increases. We propose a conceptual framework that can be widely applied during natural disturbances.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Root biomass and exudates link plant diversity with soil bacterial and fungal biomass

Nico Eisenhauer; Arnaud Lanoue; Tanja Strecker; Stefan Scheu; Katja Steinauer; Madhav P. Thakur; Liesje Mommer

Plant diversity has been shown to determine the composition and functioning of soil biota. Although root-derived organic inputs are discussed as the main drivers of soil communities, experimental evidence is scarce. While there is some evidence that higher root biomass at high plant diversity increases substrate availability for soil biota, several studies have speculated that the quantity and diversity of root inputs into the soil, i.e. though root exudates, drive plant diversity effects on soil biota. Here we used a microcosm experiment to study the role of plant species richness on the biomass of soil bacteria and fungi as well as fungal-to-bacterial ratio via root biomass and root exudates. Plant diversity significantly increased shoot biomass, root biomass, the amount of root exudates, bacterial biomass, and fungal biomass. Fungal biomass increased most with increasing plant diversity resulting in a significant shift in the fungal-to-bacterial biomass ratio at high plant diversity. Fungal biomass increased significantly with plant diversity-induced increases in root biomass and the amount of root exudates. These results suggest that plant diversity enhances soil microbial biomass, particularly soil fungi, by increasing root-derived organic inputs.


Ecology and Evolution | 2016

Root exudate cocktails: the link between plant diversity and soil microorganisms?

Katja Steinauer; Antonis Chatzinotas; Nico Eisenhauer

Abstract Higher plant diversity is often associated with higher soil microbial biomass and diversity, which is assumed to be partly due to elevated root exudate diversity. However, there is little experimental evidence that diversity of root exudates shapes soil microbial communities. We tested whether higher root exudate diversity enhances soil microbial biomass and diversity in a plant diversity gradient, thereby negating significant plant diversity effects on soil microbial properties. We set up plant monocultures and two‐ and three‐species mixtures in microcosms using functionally dissimilar plants and soil of a grassland biodiversity experiment in Germany. Artificial exudate cocktails were added by combining the most common sugars, organic acids, and amino acids found in root exudates. We applied four different exudate cocktails: two exudate diversity levels (low‐ and high‐diversity) and two nutrient‐enriched levels (carbon‐ and nitrogen‐enriched), and a control with water only. Soil microorganisms were more carbon‐ than nitrogen‐limited. Cultivation‐independent fingerprinting analysis revealed significantly different soil microbial communities among exudate diversity treatments. Most notably and according to our hypothesis, adding diverse exudate cocktails negated the significant plant diversity effect on soil microbial properties. Our findings provide the first experimental evidence that root exudate diversity is a crucial link between plant diversity and soil microorganisms.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Flood-Induced Changes in Soil Microbial Functions as Modified by Plant Diversity.

Odette González Macé; Katja Steinauer; Alexandre Jousset; Nico Eisenhauer; Stefan Scheu; Ben Bond-Lamberty

Flooding frequency is predicted to increase during the next decades, calling for a better understanding of impacts on terrestrial ecosystems and for developing strategies to mitigate potential damage. Plant diversity is expected to buffer flooding effects by providing a broad range of species’ responses. Here we report on the response of soil processes to a severe summer flood in 2013, which affected major parts of central Europe. We compared soil microbial respiration, biomass, nutrient limitation and enzyme activity in a grassland biodiversity experiment in Germany before flooding, one week and three months after the flood. Microbial biomass was reduced in the severely flooded plots at high, but not at low plant functional group richness. Flooding alleviated microbial nitrogen limitation, presumably due the input of nutrient-rich sediments. Further, the activity of soil enzymes including 1,4-β-N-acetylglucosaminidase, phenol oxidase and peroxidase increased with flooding severity, suggesting increased chitin and lignin degradation as a consequence of the input of detritus in sediments. Flooding effects were enhanced at higher plant diversity, indicating that plant diversity temporarily reduces stability of soil processes during flooding. The long-term impacts, however, remain unknown and deserve further investigation.


Ecology and Evolution | 2015

Cascading effects of belowground predators on plant communities are density-dependent.

Madhav P. Thakur; Martina Herrmann; Katja Steinauer; Saskia Rennoch; Simone Cesarz; Nico Eisenhauer

Abstract Soil food webs comprise a multitude of trophic interactions that can affect the composition and productivity of plant communities. Belowground predators feeding on microbial grazers like Collembola could decelerate nutrient mineralization by reducing microbial turnover in the soil, which in turn could negatively influence plant growth. However, empirical evidences for the ecological significance of belowground predators on nutrient cycling and plant communities are scarce. Here, we manipulated predator density (Hypoaspis aculeifer: predatory mite) with equal densities of three Collembola species as a prey in four functionally dissimilar plant communities in experimental microcosms: grass monoculture (Poa pratensis), herb monoculture (Rumex acetosa), legume monoculture (Trifolium pratense), and all three species as a mixed plant community. Density manipulation of predators allowed us to test for density‐mediated effects of belowground predators on Collembola and lower trophic groups. We hypothesized that predator density will reduce Collembola population causing a decrease in nutrient mineralization and hence detrimentally affect plant growth. First, we found a density‐dependent population change in predators, that is, an increase in low‐density treatments, but a decrease in high‐density treatments. Second, prey suppression was lower at high predator density, which caused a shift in the soil microbial community by increasing the fungal: bacterial biomass ratio, and an increase of nitrification rates, particularly in legume monocultures. Despite the increase in nutrient mineralization, legume monocultures performed worse at high predator density. Further, individual grass shoot biomass decreased in monocultures, while it increased in mixed plant communities with increasing predator density, which coincided with elevated soil N uptake by grasses. As a consequence, high predator density significantly increased plant complementarity effects indicating a decrease in interspecific plant competition. These results highlight that belowground predators can relax interspecific plant competition by increasing nutrient mineralization through their density‐dependent cascading effects on detritivore and soil microbial communities.


Global Change Biology | 2015

Plant diversity drives soil microbial biomass carbon in grasslands irrespective of global environmental change factors

Madhav P. Thakur; Alexandru Milcu; Peter Manning; Pascal A. Niklaus; Christiane Roscher; Sally A. Power; Peter B. Reich; Stefan Scheu; David Tilman; Fuxun Ai; Hongyan Guo; Rong Ji; Sarah Pierce; Nathaly Guerrero Ramirez; Annabell Nicola Richter; Katja Steinauer; Tanja Strecker; Anja Vogel; Nico Eisenhauer


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2013

Transgressive overyielding of soil microbial biomass in a grassland plant diversity gradient

Yasemin Guenay; Anne Ebeling; Katja Steinauer; Wolfgang W. Weisser; Nico Eisenhauer


BMC Ecology | 2016

Convergence of soil microbial properties after plant colonization of an experimental plant diversity gradient

Katja Steinauer; Britta Jensen; Tanja Strecker; Enrica De Luca; Stefan Scheu; Nico Eisenhauer


Applied Soil Ecology | 2014

Organic textile dye improves the visual assessment of the bait-lamina test

Nico Eisenhauer; Daniela Wirsch; Simone Cesarz; Dylan Craven; Peter Dietrich; Julia Friese; Juliane Helm; Jes Hines; Madlen Schellenberg; Pascal Scherreiks; Benjamin Schwarz; Christin Uhe; Kristin Wagner; Katja Steinauer

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Stefan Scheu

University of Göttingen

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Tanja Strecker

University of Göttingen

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Christiane Roscher

Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

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Liesje Mommer

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Arnaud Lanoue

François Rabelais University

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