نتایج جستجو برای: plant litter

تعداد نتایج: 405984  

2015
Xu Pan Yao-Bin Song Can Jiang Guo-Fang Liu Xue-Hua Ye Xiu-Fang Xie Yu-Kun Hu Wei-Wei Zhao Lijuan Cui Johannes H. C. Cornelissen Ming Dong Andreas Prinzing Martin Schädler

Plant leaf litter is an important source of soil chemicals that are essential for the ecosystem and changes in leaf litter chemical traits during decomposition will determine the availability of multiple chemical elements recycling in the ecosystem. However, it is unclear whether the changes in litter chemical traits during decomposition and their similarities across species can be predicted, r...

2004
Steven D. Allison Peter M. Vitousek

Litter quality parameters such as nitrogen and lignin content correlate with decomposition rates at coarse scales, but finescale mechanisms driving litter decomposition have proven more difficult to generalize. One potentially important driver of decomposition is the activity of extracellular enzymes that catalyze the degradation of complex compounds present in litter. To address the importance...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology ecology 2008
Clare J Trinder David Johnson Rebekka R E Artz

Peatlands are important reservoirs of carbon (C) but our understanding of C cycling on cutover peatlands is limited. We investigated the decomposition over 18 months of five types of plant litter (Calluna vulgaris, Eriophorum angustifolium, Eriophorum vaginatum, Picea sitchensis and Sphagnum auriculatum) at a cutover peatland in Scotland, at three water tables. We measured changes in C, nitroge...

Journal: :The New phytologist 2017
Marissa R Lee Emily S Bernhardt Peter M van Bodegom J Hans C Cornelissen Jens Kattge Daniel C Laughlin Ülo Niinemets Josep Peñuelas Peter B Reich Benjamin Yguel Justin P Wright

Many exotic species have little apparent impact on ecosystem processes, whereas others have dramatic consequences for human and ecosystem health. There is growing evidence that invasions foster eutrophication. We need to identify species that are harmful and systems that are vulnerable to anticipate these consequences. Species' traits may provide the necessary insights. We conducted a global me...

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
Bao-Ming Chen Shao-Lin Peng Carla M. D’Antonio Dai-Jiang Li Wen-Tao Ren

A common hypothesis to explain the effect of litter mixing is based on the difference in litter N content between mixed species. Although many studies have shown that litter of invasive non-native plants typically has higher N content than that of native plants in the communities they invade, there has been surprisingly little study of mixing effects during plant invasions. We address this ques...

2018
Mathieu Santonja Laura Pellan Christophe Piscart

Plant litter decomposition is an essential ecosystem function that contributes to carbon and nutrient cycling in streams. Aquatic shredders, mainly macroinvertebrates, can affect this process in various ways; they consume leaf litter, breaking it down into fragments and creating suitable habitats or resources for other organisms through the production of fine particulate organic matter (FPOM). ...

2015
Md Abdullah Yousuf Al Harun Joshua Johnson Md Nazim Uddin Randall W. Robinson Sergio R. Roiloa

Chrysanthemoides monilifera subsp. monilifera (boneseed), a weed of national significance in Australia, threatens indigenous species and crop production through allelopathy. We aimed to identify phenolic compounds produced by boneseed and to assess their phytotoxicity on native species. Phenolic compounds in water and methanol extracts, and in decomposed litter-mediated soil leachate were ident...

Journal: :The New phytologist 2015
Rafael E Cárdenas Stephan Hättenschwiler Renato Valencia Adriana Argoti Olivier Dangles

It is commonly accepted that plant responses to foliar herbivory (e.g. plant defenses) can influence subsequent leaf-litter decomposability in soil. While several studies have assessed the herbivory-decomposability relationship among different plant species, experimental tests at the intra-specific level are rare, although critical for a mechanistic understanding of how herbivores affect decomp...

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