Beyond the black box: promoting mathematical collaborations for elucidating interactions in soil ecology

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Issue Date
2019-07-12Author
Bennett, Alison E.
Preedy, Katharine
Golubski, Antonio
Umbanhowar, James
Borrett, Stuart R.
Byrne, Loren
Apostol, Kent
Bever, James D.
Biederman, Lori
Classen, Aimée T.
Cuddington, Kim
de Graaff, Marie‐Anne
Garrett, Karen A.
Gross, Lou
Hastings, Alan
Hoeksema, Jason D.
Hrynkiv, Volodymyr
Karst, Justine
Kummel, Miro
Lee, Charlotte T.
Liang, Chao
Liao, Wei
Mack, Keenan
Miller, Laura
Ownley, Bonnie
Rojas, Claudia
Simms, Ellen L.
Walsh, Vonda K.
Warren, Matthew
Zhu, Jun
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Rights
© 2019 The Authors.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Understanding soil systems is critical because they form the structural and nutritional foundation for plants and thus every terrestrial habitat and agricultural system. In this paper, we encourage increased use of mathematical models to drive forward understanding of interactions in soil ecological systems. We discuss several distinctive features of soil ecosystems and empirical studies of them. We explore some perceptions that have previously deterred more extensive use of models in soil ecology and some advances that have already been made using models to elucidate soil ecological interactions. We provide examples where mathematical models have been used to test the plausibility of hypothesized mechanisms, to explore systems where experimental manipulations are currently impossible, or to determine the most important variables to measure in experimental and natural systems. To aid in the development of theory in this field, we present a table describing major soil ecology topics, the theory previously used, and providing key terms for theoretical approaches that could potentially address them. We then provide examples from the table that may either contribute to important incremental developments in soil science or potentially revolutionize our understanding of plant–soil systems. We challenge scientists and mathematicians to push theoretical explorations in soil systems further and highlight three major areas for the development of mathematical models in soil ecology: theory spanning scales and ecological hierarchies, processes, and evolution.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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Citation
Bennett, A. E., Preedy, K., Golubski, A., Umbanhowar, J., Borrett, S. R., Byrne, L., Apostol, K., Bever, J. D., Biederman, L., Classen, A. T., Cuddington, K., de Graaff, M.‐A., Garrett, K. A., Gross, L., Hastings, A., Hoeksema, J. D., Hrynkiv, V., Karst, J., Kummel, M., Lee, C. T., Liang, C., Liao, W., Mack, K., Miller, L., Ownley, B., Rojas, C., Simms, E. L., Walsh, V. K., Warren, M., and Zhu, J.. 2019. Beyond the black box: promoting mathematical collaborations for elucidating interactions in soil ecology. Ecosphere 10( 7):e02799. 10.1002/ecs2.2799
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