Publications by authors named "Mei Xiang Gao"

Article Synopsis
  • Functional traits are key indicators that show how organisms adapt to environmental changes and influence various ecosystem functions, especially in soil animals.
  • Understanding soil animal biodiversity—through species, phylogenetic, and functional diversity—helps us grasp distribution patterns, community assembly, and their overall ecosystem roles.
  • The review emphasizes the need for better research on eco-evolutionary processes affecting soil animal traits, creating a trait database, and using trait-based approaches for ecological restoration to enhance soil biodiversity and ecosystem sustainability.
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In May, July and September 2012, four treatment plots with different concentrations of effective microorganisms (EM) compost were established (control, low, medium, and high concentration) in a typical black soil farmland in Harbin. We investigated the effects of different EM compost concentrations on the composition, vertical structure, seasonal dynamics, and diversity of micro- and medium-sized soil faunal communities. A total of 7860 individuals (with the average density of 49125 ind·m) were captured which were classified into 30 groups, belonging to ten classes and three orders.

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By using landscape-level animal population simulator (LAPS), the spatiotemporal dynamics of the main prey populations of Panthera tigris from 1990 to 2009 in East Wanda Mountains were simulated, based on the different scenarios of accidental mortality and carrying capacity that could represent the influence of direct and indirect human disturbance. The effects of the accidental mortality and carrying capacity on the population dynamics were studied, and the spatiotemporal distribution of animal blocks was exhibited explicitly in the study area, with the individual density in different patches compared. The results showed that compared with carrying capacity, accidental mortality had more effects on prey populations, and the population density was significantly higher in shrubs than in broad-leaved forests.

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