نتایج جستجو برای: litter quality

تعداد نتایج: 764857  

Journal: :The New phytologist 2013
Pablo García-Palacios Rubén Milla Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo Nieves Martín-Robles Mónica Alvaro-Sánchez Diana H Wall

Domestication took plants from natural environments to agro-ecosystems, where resources are generally plentiful and plant life is better buffered against environmental risks such as drought or pathogens. We hypothesized that predictions derived from the comparison of low vs high resource ecosystems (faster-growing plants promoting faster nutrient cycling in the latter) extrapolate to the proces...

2013
Zachary L. Rinkes Robert L. Sinsabaugh Daryl L. Moorhead A. Stuart Grandy Michael N. Weintraub

Fluctuations in climate and edaphic factors influence field decomposition rates and preclude a complete understanding of how microbial communities respond to plant litter quality. In contrast, laboratory microcosms isolate the intrinsic effects of litter chemistry and microbial community from extrinsic effects of environmental variation. Used together, these paired approaches provide mechanisti...

Journal: :Journal of environmental quality 2007
P A Moore D R Edwards

Alum (Al2(SO4)(3).14H2O) additions to poultry litter result in lower ammonia (NH3) volatilization and phosphorus (P) runoff; however, the long-term effects of alum on soil P behavior have been unknown. The objectives of this study were to evaluate the long-term effects of poultry litter, alum-treated litter, and ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3) on P availability in soils and P runoff. Two studies were...

Journal: :Poultry science 2013
D M Miles J P Brooks M R McLaughlin D E Rowe

Ammonia (NH3) volatilized from broiler litter diminishes indoor air quality, which can potentially decrease bird productivity. Emissions of NH3 exhausted from broiler houses pose environmental concerns for ecosystem biodiversity, aquatic nutrient enrichment, and particulate formation in the atmosphere. Research was conducted sampling litter (rice hull base) in 3 tunnel-ventilated commercial bro...

Journal: :Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 2015
Verónica Ferreira Bastien Castagneyrol Julia Koricheva Vladislav Gulis Eric Chauvet Manuel A S Graça

The trophic state of many streams is likely to deteriorate in the future due to the continuing increase in human-induced nutrient availability. Therefore, it is of fundamental importance to understand how nutrient enrichment affects plant litter decomposition, a key ecosystem-level process in forest streams. Here, we present a meta-analysis of 99 studies published between 1970 and 2012 that rep...

2017
Renato Tavares Martins Renan de Souza Rezende José Francisco Gonçalves Júnior Aline Lopes Maria Teresa Fernandez Piedade Heloide de Lima Cavalcante Neusa Hamada

Climate change may affect the chemical composition of riparian leaf litter and, aquatic organisms and, consequently, leaf breakdown. We evaluated the effects of different scenarios combining increased temperature and carbon dioxide (CO2) on leaf detritus of Hevea spruceana (Benth) Müll. and decomposers (insect shredders and microorganisms). We hypothesized that simulated climate change (warming...

2012
Alexander Rief Brigitte A. Knapp Julia Seeber

On alpine pastureland the decline in large-bodied earthworm numbers and biomass after abandonment of management might be the result of a shift from highly palatable grass litter to poorly digestible leaf litter of dwarf shrubs. To test this hypothesis, we analysed nitrogen, phosphorous and total phenolic contents of fresh and aged litter of eight commonly occuring alpine plant species and compa...

2008
Andrew R. HOLDSWORTH

The effects of invasive earthworms on decomposition are little known, and the controls of their effect on decomposition may be different than those of microbes. Sugar maple–dominated forests previously devoid of earthworms in the western Great Lakes region (USA) exhibit different degrees of earthworm invasion, presenting a natural experiment to study its effects on litter decomposition. We hypo...

Journal: :Journal of medical entomology 2007
Lauren Harshaw Charlie Chrisawn Benjamin Kittinger Jessica Carlson Grace Metz Leslie Smith Christopher J Paradise

Treeholes are detritus-based communities, and resource quantity and quality play a large role in structuring such communities. The primary resource is leaf litter, but decaying invertebrates also are a resource to treehole inhabitants. These communities are subject to a variety of disturbances, which may affect resources or cause widespread mortality. When dead inhabitants decay, they provide a...

Journal: :Ecology 2009
Tana E Wood Deborah Lawrence Deborah A Clark Robin L Chazdon

Litter-induced pulses of nutrient availability could play an important role in the productivity and nutrient cycling of forested ecosystems, especially tropical forests. Tropical forests experience such pulses as a result of wet-dry seasonality and during major climatic events, such as strong El Niños. We hypothesized that (1) an increase in the quantity and quality of litter inputs would stimu...

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