2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2008.01837.x
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Long‐term patterns of mass loss during the decomposition of leaf and fine root litter: an intersite comparison

Abstract: Decomposition is a critical process in global carbon cycling. During decomposition, leaf and fine root litter may undergo a later, relatively slow phase; past long-term experiments indicate this phase occurs, but whether it is a general phenomenon has not been examined. Data from Long-term Intersite Decomposition Experiment Team, representing 27 sites and nine litter types (for a total of 234 cases) was used to test the frequency of this later, slow phase of decomposition. Litter mass remaining after up to 10 … Show more

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Cited by 266 publications
(234 citation statements)
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“…Biotic interactions between plants and detrital communities have also been seen in cross-site leaf decomposition studies. Home-field advantage has been observed where detrital processing and mass loss was faster in the forest type of origin than when translocated to other forest types in the same region or across latitudinal gradients [25,105,106]. Basidiomycete fungi soften decomposing leaves by degrading lignocellulose, so are more important for preconditioning of tough leaves to make them palatable to invertebrates.…”
Section: Biotic Changes and Interactions In The Detrital Food Web Affmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Biotic interactions between plants and detrital communities have also been seen in cross-site leaf decomposition studies. Home-field advantage has been observed where detrital processing and mass loss was faster in the forest type of origin than when translocated to other forest types in the same region or across latitudinal gradients [25,105,106]. Basidiomycete fungi soften decomposing leaves by degrading lignocellulose, so are more important for preconditioning of tough leaves to make them palatable to invertebrates.…”
Section: Biotic Changes and Interactions In The Detrital Food Web Affmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Most of the turnover rates from the LIDET data were obtained from 10-year decomposition records, whereas the maximum length of decomposition records included in the Zhang et al (2008) dataset was three years. Some studies argue that leaf litter turnover rates are best represented by two or three turnover rate components: fast, slow, and passive (Adair et al 2008, Harmon et al 2009) with the impact of slower components on the total leaf litter turnover rates dependent on litter quality (Adair et al 2008). Comparison of the LIDET turnover rates with the estimates from our calibrated best-fitting model revealed no significant relationships neither between the model's residuals and lignin:N ratios (Fig.…”
Section: Global Leaf Litter Distributionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore lignin:N ratios remained a source of uncertainty for the global leaf litter turnover rates distribution. Long-term (10-year) litter decomposition rates have been reported to be lower than short term (1-year) decay rates on average by 22-30% (Harmon et al 2009). The longest observation period for litter decomposition in Zhang et al (2008) that was used in our study was three years, therefore litter decomposition rates might have been overestimated, causing underestimation of the litter pools.…”
Section: Global Leaf Litter Distributionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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