نتایج جستجو برای: litter chemical composition

تعداد نتایج: 610264  

2009
Marcy E. Gallo Andrea Porras-Alfaro Kylea J. Odenbach Robert L. Sinsabaugh

In arid ecosystems, abiotic processes facilitate the physical and chemical degradation of plant litter to the extent that decomposition models that use climatic and litter composition variables as surrogates for microbial activity are not predictive. The purpose of this study was to estimate the potential contribution of photodegradation to the decomposition of plant litters that varies in arch...

2008
Timothy R. Filley Melissa K. McCormick Susan E. Crow Katalin Szlavecz Dennis F. Whigham Cliff T. Johnston Ronald N. van den Heuvel

[1] To investigate the control of earthworm populations on leaf litter biopolymer decay dynamics, we analyzed the residues of Liriodendron tulipifera L. (tulip poplar) leaves after six months of decay, comparing open surface litter and litter bag experiments among forests with different native and invasive earthworm abundances. Six plots were established in successional tulip poplar forests whe...

2017
Sabine Both Dafydd M O Elias Ully H Kritzler Nick J Ostle David Johnson

In hyperdiverse tropical forests, the key drivers of litter decomposition are poorly understood despite its crucial role in facilitating nutrient availability for plants and microbes. Selective logging is a pressing land use with potential for considerable impacts on plant-soil interactions, litter decomposition, and nutrient cycling. Here, in Borneo's tropical rainforests, we test the hypothes...

2014
Tanise Luisa Sausen Michely Tomazi Lívia Scheunemann Luís Mauro Gonçalves Rosa

Soil carbon accumulation is largely dependent on net primary productivity. To our knowledge, there have been no studies investigating the dynamics of carbon accumulation in weathered subtropical soils, especially in managed eucalyptus plantations. We quantified the seasonal input of leaf litter, the leaf decomposition rate and soil carbon stocks in an commercial plantation of Eucalyptus saligna...

Journal: :Trends in ecology & evolution 1999
Trumbo

0169-5347/99/$ – see front matter © 1999 Elsevier Science. All rights reserved. PII: S0169-5347(98)01505-5 5 significant long-term changes in nutrient mineralization, which causes major and often unexpected changes in plant species composition. Combined with Foster and Gross’s observation about the strong effects of litter on plant species establishment, these results imply that litter producti...

2007
J. S. King K. S. Pregitzer D. R. Zak M. E. Kubiske

Rising atmospheric carbon dioxide has the potential to alter leaf litter chemistry, potentially affecting decomposition and rates of carbon and nitrogen cycling in forest ecosystems. This study was conducted to determine whether growth under elevated atmospheric CO2 altered the quality and microbial decomposition of leaf litter of a widely distributed northern hardwood species at sites of low a...

2015
Youchao Chen Jian Sun Fangting Xie Yan Yan Xiaodan Wang Genwei Cheng Xuyang Lu

While litter decomposition is a fundamental ecological process, previous studies have mainly focused on the decay of single species. In this study, we conducted a litter-mixing experiment to investigate litter diversity effects on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from an alpine steppe soil in Northern Tibet. Significant non-additive effects of litter diversity on GHG dynamics can be detected; the...

2017
Andries A. Kampfraath Ellard R. Hunting Christian Mulder Anton M. Breure Mark O. Gessner Michiel H. S. Kraak Wim Admiraal

Currently available tools for studying plant litter decomposition and invertebrate consumption in aquatic ecosystems have at least 2 major limitations: 1) the difficulty of manipulating litter chemical composition to provide mechanistic insights into attributes of litter quality controlling decomposition rate, and 2) lack of a standardized litter that hampers comparisons of results among studie...

Journal: :The New phytologist 2011
Giuliano Bonanomi Guido Incerti Elisa Barile Manuela Capodilupo Vincenzo Antignani Antonio Mingo Virginia Lanzotti Felice Scala Stefano Mazzoleni

Litter decomposition provides nutrients that sustain ecosystem productivity, but litter may also hamper root proliferation. The objectives of this work were to assess the inhibitory effect of litter decomposition on seedling growth and root proliferation; to study the role of nutrient immobilization and phytotoxicity; and to characterize decomposing litter by (13)C NMR spectroscopy. A litter-ba...

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