10.18710/BROZEGRoos, Ruben ErikRuben ErikRoos0000-0002-1580-6424Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)Birkemoe, ToneToneBirkemoeNorwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)Asplund, JohanJohanAsplundNorwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)Ľuptáčik, PeterPeterĽuptáčikPavel Jozef Šafárik UniversityRaschmanová, NatáliaNatáliaRaschmanováPavel Jozef Šafárik UniversityAlatalo, Juha M.Juha M.AlataloQatar UniversityOlsen, Siri LieSiri LieOlsenNorwegian Institute for Nature ResearchKlanderud, KariKariKlanderudNorwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)Replication Data for: Legacy effects of experimental environmental change on soil micro-arthropod communitiesDataverseNO2020Earth and Environmental SciencesEnvironmental manipulationExperimental warmingAcariAlpine ecologyCollembolaCommunity recoveryEcological resilienceEcosystem recoveryHerbivoryOribatidaCollembolaNutrient additionSoil micro-arthropodsRoos, Ruben ErikRuben ErikRoosNorwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)2019-12-172023-09-282004-07-03/2016-06-28Species abundances10.1002/ecs2.303053771241012470text/plaintext/plain; charset=US-ASCIItext/plain; charset=US-ASCII1.2CC0 1.0This dataset presents data for "Legacy effects of experimental environmental change on soil micro-arthropod communities". The set contains data on soil micro-arthropods from an environmental experiment at Mount Sanddalsnuten near Finse, southern Norway. The dataset allows for analyses on soil micro-arthropod abundance and community structure and their response to environmental treatments: warming by Open Top Chamber, nutrient addition (NPK fertiliser), both of these treatments combined, and controls (ambient temperature, no fertiliser). Soil micro-arthropods were sampled in two years (2004 and 2016) which allows for assessment of any legacy effects of the treatments which were ceased in 2007. Between 2007 and 2016, the plots were subjected to different grazing regimes. Collembola were grouped as epi-edaphic (living on top of the soil), hemi-edaphic (living amongst the soil surface), and eu-edaphic (living deep within the soil).7.515694160.61282027.524410660.6172239The Research Council of Norway249902Carl Trygger Foundation