Investigation Soil Feeding Activity in Eucalyptus Plantations

Michelle Eckert’s research focused on advancing the use of the bait-lamina test, a well-established, non-destructive method for quantifying soil feeding activity by soil fauna in Eucalyptus plantations. By inserting bait-filled plastic strips into the soil profile, the technique provides an integrative measure of below-ground biological activity across sites and treatments.

Michelle Eckert conducted a field study conducted in January 2024 compared three alternative bait types (oat, nettle, and jelly) with the standard bran-based formulation across environmentally diverse Eucalyptus sites. Results showed that bran remained the most effective and reliable bait, while nettle performed poorly and inconsistently. Jelly demonstrated stable performance and may provide a practical alternative where standard materials are unavailable. These findings were published in Pedobiologia, Journal of Soil Ecology in October 2025.

The second component of the research examined the effect of initial planting density on soil feeding activity across four Eucalyptus species at the IMPACT OAL facility under Mediterranean-type climatic conditions. Across all species, stand age and seasonal climatic variation were the primary drivers of soil feeding activity, while planting density had weak and inconsistent effects during early stand development. The findings highlight the importance of long-term studies to better understand how plantation development influences below-ground ecosystem functioning. The manuscript from this work is currently in an advanced stage of preparation for submission to a peer-reviewed journal.

Publication: Pedobiologia article DOI