All Stories

  1. Discrimination of beef production system and regional geography by multivariate analysis of stable isotope ratios (C, N, S, O, H)
  2. Determination of dynamic physical properties of peat and bark-based alternative casing materials for mushroom cultivation using X-ray computed tomography
  3. Consequences of land-use changes for soil quality and function, with a focus on the EU and Latin America
  4. Corrigendum to “Edaphobase 2.0: Advanced international data warehouse for collating and using soil biodiversity datasets” [Applied Soil Ecology 204 (2024) 105710]
  5. Discrimination of Beef from Predominantly Grass-Fed and Other Production Systems Using the Trace Elemental Profile of Muscle
  6. The power of soil amendments to restore degraded grassland soil: A combined approach using physical indicators and X-ray computed tomography
  7. Open letter: A global call to strengthen national soil biodiversity action through coordination and harmonization
  8. Emerging Microbial and Enzymatic Approaches for Sustainable Antibiotic Biodegradation in Livestock Manure to Mitigate Water Pollution Risks
  9. Genetic lineages and ecological gradients co-determine the trophic niches of earthworms
  10. Multispecies swards improve nitrogen use efficiency and reduce nitrogen surplus in agricultural grasslands
  11. Establishing a comprehensive host-parasite stable isotope database to unravel trophic relationships
  12. Application of isotope and multi-element fingerprinting in subregional milk authentication – The case of Ningxia, China
  13. A report of the unusual presence of Haplotaxis cf. gordioides in a terrestrial subsoil and first isotopic analysis of its trophic position
  14. The Potential of Sitka Spruce Bark as an Alternative to Peat Casing for Mushroom (Agaricus bisporus) Production
  15. Changes in the soil detrital food chain associated with Gunnera tinctoria plant invasions
  16. Traffic induced compaction and physical quality of grassland soil under different soil moisture deficits
  17. Peat alternative casing materials for the cultivation of Agaricus bisporus mushrooms – A systematic review
  18. Edaphobase 2.0: Advanced international data warehouse for collating and using soil biodiversity datasets
  19. Greater trophic diversity of soil animal communities under land use and warmer climate
  20. Annual and seasonal dry matter production, botanical species composition, and nutritive value of multispecies, permanent pasture, and perennial ryegrass swards managed under grazing
  21. The potential of the mineral composition to discriminate between beef from different cattle diets and between individual muscles
  22. Stable isotope insights into arthropod food chains and nitrogen cycling in a rehabilitated tailings chronosequence
  23. Use of stable isotope ratio analysis to investigate the biology and clinical significance of seal parasites
  24. Effects of earthworms on microbial community structure, functionality and soil properties in soil cover treatments for mine tailings rehabilitation
  25. Going Platinum: The European Journal of Soil Science at 75
  26. City Dwellers: Earthworms in Urban Ecosystems
  27. Earthworm Ecology in Northern European Forests
  28. Extracting DNA from soil or directly from isolated nematodes indicate dissimilar community structure for Europe-wide forest soils
  29. Verifying origin claims on dairy products using stable isotope ratio analysis and random forest classification
  30. Invertebrate communities (Collembola and Acari) in soil cover treatments for mine tailings in a long‐term field experiment
  31. Isolation of casein for stable isotope ratio analysis of butter, cheese, and milk powder
  32. Bacterial Keystone Taxa Regulate Carbon Metabolism in the Earthworm Gut
  33. Correction to: Gunnera tinctoria invasions increase, not decrease, earthworm abundance and diversity
  34. Gunnera tinctoria invasions increase, not decrease, earthworm abundance and diversity
  35. Testing numeric and logarithmic scales for hydraulic-energy indices and functions to assess physical earthworm effects on soil structure
  36. Rapid transfer of C and N excreted by decomposer soil animals to plants and above-ground herbivores
  37. Stable isotope ratio analysis for the authentication of milk and dairy ingredients: A review
  38. Corrigendum to “Molecular data confirms the existence of distinct lineages within Lumbricus friendi (Cognetti 1904) and related “friends” [Eur. J. Soil Biol. 108 (2022) 103382]
  39. Feeding habits and multifunctional classification of soil‐associated consumers from protists to vertebrates
  40. Molecular data confirms the existence of distinct lineages within Lumbricus friendi (Cognetti 1904) and related “friends”
  41. Comparison of two image analysis software for root trait analysis of single and mixed species grasslands
  42. Evaluating the impact of pyrethroid insecticide resistance on reproductive fitness in Sitobion avenae
  43. Dinotefuran alters Collembola-fungi-bacteria interactions that control mineralization of maize and soil organic carbon
  44. Global data on earthworm abundance, biomass, diversity and corresponding environmental properties
  45. Soil Meso‐ and Macrofauna Indicators of Restoration Success in Rehabilitated Mine Sites
  46. Stable isotope profile (C, N, O, S) of Irish raw milk: Baseline data for authentication
  47. Use of deep learning for structural analysis of computer tomography images of soil samples
  48. Methods and approaches to advance soil macroecology
  49. Erratum for the Report “Global distribution of earthworm diversity” by H. R. P. Phillips, C. A. Guerra, M. L. C. Bartz, M. J. I. Briones, G. Brown, T. W. Crowther, O. Ferlian, K. B. Gongalsky, J. van den Hoogen, J. Krebs, A. Orgiazzi, D. Routh, B. Schw...
  50. Comparison of the mustard oil and electrical methods for sampling earthworm communities in rural and urban soils
  51. Evidence for substantial acetate presence in cutaneous earthworm mucus
  52. A global database of soil nematode abundance and functional group composition
  53. In-field prevalence of resistant grain aphid Sitobion avenae (Fabricius)
  54. Influence of dung pats on soil physical quality mediated by earthworms: from dung deposition to decay and beyond
  55. Consequences of land-use changes for soil quality and function, with a focus on the EU and Latin America
  56. Global distribution of earthworm diversity
  57. Ash application enhances decomposition of recalcitrant organic matter
  58. Host identification in unfed ticks from stable isotope compositions (δ 13 C and δ 15 N)
  59. Comparison of Soil Physical Quality Indicators Using Direct and Indirect Data Inputs Derived from a Combination of In-Situ and Ex-Situ Methods
  60. Soil properties and earthworm populations associated with bauxite residue rehabilitation strategies
  61. The impact of cattle dung pats on earthworm distribution in grazed pastures
  62. The fatty acid profile and stable isotope ratios of C and N of muscle from cattle that grazed grass or grass/clover pastures before slaughter and their discriminatory potential
  63. Release of plant-available silicon from various silicon-rich amendments into soil solutions and leachates
  64. Meat provenance: Authentication of geographical origin and dietary background of meat
  65. Effects of silicon-rich soil amendments on growth, mortality and bark feeding damage of Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis) seedlings under field conditions
  66. Silicon concentrations in soil and bark in Irish Sitka spruce forests
  67. Consequences of anecic earthworm removal over 18 months for earthworm assemblages and nutrient cycling in a grassland
  68. The Living Soil: Biodiversity and Functions
  69. Priorities for research in soil ecology
  70. Earthworm populations in twelve cover crop and weed management combinations
  71. Tillage farming damaging earthworm populations
  72. Soil networks become more connected and take up more carbon as nature restoration progresses
  73. Nannipieri, P.et al., 2003. Microbial diversity and soil functions.European Journal of Soil Science, 54, 655-670.
  74. Selecting cost effective and policy-relevant biological indicators for European monitoring of soil biodiversity and ecosystem function
  75. Stable isotope analysis (δ13C andδ15N) of soil nematodes from four feeding groups
  76. Earthworm functional traits and interspecific interactions affect plant nitrogen acquisition and primary production
  77. Soil stewardship as a nexus between Ecosystem Services and One Health
  78. Soil algae in soil food webs
  79. Mapping earthworm communities in Europe
  80. Organic matter composition and the protist and nematode communities around anecic earthworm burrows
  81. Anecic earthworms (Lumbricus terrestris) alleviate negative effects of extreme rainfall events on soil and plants in field mesocosms
  82. Isotopic composition of sheep wool records seasonality of climate and diet
  83. Temporal variation outweighs effects of biosolids applications in shaping arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi communities on plants grown in pasture and arable soils
  84. Production of rabbit dung triple-labelled with C, N and S stable isotopes
  85. Isotopic turnover of carbon and nitrogen in bovine blood fractions and inner organs
  86. Silicon reduces slug feeding on wheat seedlings
  87. Beef authentication using dietary markers: Chemometric selection and modelling of significant beef biomarkers using concatenated data from multiple analytical methods
  88. The drilosphere concept: Fine-scale incorporation of surface residue-derived N and C around natural Lumbricus terrestris burrows
  89. Permanent and new arable field margins support large earthworm communities but do not increase in-field populations
  90. Contrasting Cu, Fe, and Zn isotopic patterns in organs and body fluids of mice and sheep, with emphasis on cellular fractionation
  91. Land-use and land-management change: relationships with earthworm and fungi communities and soil structural properties
  92. Authentication of grass-fed beef using bovine muscle, hair or urine
  93. Mediterranean earthworm species in Ireland
  94. A refined sampling strategy for intra-tooth stable isotope analysis of mammalian enamel
  95. Cross-taxa congruence, indicators and environmental gradients in soils under agricultural and extensive land management
  96. Distinct microbial and faunal communities and translocated carbon in Lumbricus terrestris drilospheres
  97. Biochar and Earthworm Effects on Soil Nitrous Oxide and Carbon Dioxide Emissions
  98. Unique soil microbial assemblages associated with grassland ant species with different nesting and foraging strategies
  99. Natural isotope signatures of host blood are replicated in moulted ticks
  100. Sulphur isotopes in animal hair track distance to sea
  101. Beef Authentication and Retrospective Dietary Verification Using Stable Isotope Ratio Analysis of Bovine Muscle and Tail Hair
  102. Multielement Isotope Analysis of Bovine Muscle for Determination of International Geographical Origin of Meat
  103. α-Tocopherol stereoisomers in beef as an indicator of vitamin E supplementation in cattle diets
  104. Tissue turnover in ovine muscles and lipids as recorded by multiple (H, C, O, S) stable isotope ratios
  105. Effects of Biosolids at Varying Rates on Earthworms (Eisenia fetida) and Springtails (Folsomia candida)
  106. The fate of slurry-N fractions in herbage and soil during two growing seasons following application
  107. Intra-muscular and inter-muscular variation in carbon turnover of ovine muscles as recorded by stable isotope ratios
  108. A simple method for in situ-labelling with 15N and 13C of grassland plant species by foliar brushing
  109. Trophic relationships of grassland ants based on stable isotopes
  110. The isotope record of short- and long-term dietary changes in sheep tooth enamel: Implications for quantitative reconstruction of paleodiets
  111. Bodily variability of zinc natural isotope abundances in sheep
  112. A critical review of current methods in earthworm ecology: From individuals to populations
  113. Gut wall bacteria of earthworms: a natural selection process
  114. Slurry 15NH4-N recovery in herbage and soil: effects of application method and timing
  115. Predatory soil nematodes (Nematoda: Mononchida) in major land-use types across Ireland
  116. Field preservation and DNA extraction methods for intestinal microbial diversity analysis in earthworms
  117. Turnover of carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur in bovine longissimus dorsi and psoas major muscles: Implications for isotopic authentication of meat
  118. Earthworm population dynamics as influenced by the quality of exogenous organic matter
  119. Effect of age and food intake on dietary carbon turnover recorded in sheep wool
  120. Importance of DNA quality in comparative soil microbial community structure analyses
  121. Relationships between earthworm populations and management intensity in cattle-grazed pastures in Ireland
  122. Seasonal variation in the C, N and S stable isotope composition of retail organic and conventional Irish beef
  123. Experimental determination of dietary carbon turnover in bovine hair and hoof
  124. Long-term stability of RNA in post-mortem bovine skeletal muscle, liver and subcutaneous adipose tissues
  125. The feeding ecology of earthworms – A review
  126. Three-dimensional growth of bovine hoof as recorded by carbon stable isotope ratios
  127. Using hooves for high-resolution isotopic reconstruction of bovine dietary history
  128. Potential use of leaf carbon isotope discrimination for the selection of shade-tolerant species
  129. Dichogaster bolaui (Oligochaeta: Octochaetidae), an unusual invader in a swimming pool in Ireland
  130. Inferring the origin and dietary history of beef from C, N and S stable isotope ratio analysis
  131. A simple and rapid method for labelling earthworms with 15N and 13C
  132. Alteration of the carbon and nitrogen stable isotope composition of beef by substitution of grass silage with maize silage
  133. Dual13C,15N labelling of terrestrial slugs (Deroceras reticulatum)
  134. Dual stable isotope analysis (δ13C and δ15N) of soil invertebrates and their food sources
  135. Isotopic labelling of earthworms: comments on the paper by Whalen and Janzen (2002)
  136. Why do cereal–legume intercrops support large earthworm populations?
  137. Relationships between earthworm populations, grassland management and badger densities in County Kilkenny, IrelandThe 7th international symposium on earthworm ecology · Cardiff · Wales · 2002
  138. Intensive cultivation can drastically reduce earthworm populations in arable land
  139. Intrapopulation variation in carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios in the earthworm Aporrectodea longa
  140. Tracing nitrogen derived from slurry in earthworms using 15N/14N stable isotope ratios at natural abundances
  141. Carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios in body tissue and mucus of feeding and fasting earthworms ( Lumbricus festivus )
  142. Natural abundance of 15N and 13C in earthworms from a wheat and a wheat-clover field
  143. Influence of mineral soil on the palatability of organic matter for lumbricid earthworms: A simple food preference study
  144. Population dynamics of Pseudomonas corrugata 2140R lux8 in earthworm food and in earthworm casts