Data from a 17-year-long irrigation experiment (Pfynwald, Switzerland) in a naturally dry forest dominated by 100-year-old pine trees (Pinus sylvestris).
Data include: (1) properties of soils sampled in 2011 and 2019 (SOC and N concentrations and stocks, soil masses, 13C and 15N natural abundances, C/N ratios, clay content, pH, inorganic C, stoniness, bulk density); (2) litter mass loss and initial litter chemistry of dominant tree species (Quercus, Pinus, Viburnum) from a litter decomposition experiment carried out in 2014-2015; (3) soil fauna abundance sampled in 2015; (4) soil volumetric water content and soil temperature at 10 cm depth measured during the litter decomposition experiment in 2014-2015; (5) soil mesofauna (Acari and Collembola) diversity and community composition from sampling in 2017; (6) irrigation-induced changes in litterfall (2013-2014, 2016-2017), fine-root production (data 2015 from Brunner et al., 2019, Frontiers in Plant Science), annual soil respiration (estimated for 2014-2015), litter mass loss from litter decomposition experiment (May-October 2014), and SOC stocks measured in 2011 and 2019; (7) Moisture dependency of microbial soil respiration (0-10 cm depth, adapted from Joseph et al., 2020 PNAS), soil respiration measured in 2015 and abundance of Acari, Collembola and Lumbricidae sampled in 2015.