首页> 外文期刊>Oecologia >Influence of habitat, litter type, and soil invertebrates on leaf-litter decomposition in a fragmented Amazonian landscape
【24h】

Influence of habitat, litter type, and soil invertebrates on leaf-litter decomposition in a fragmented Amazonian landscape

机译:栖息地,凋落物类型和无脊椎动物对破碎的亚马逊景观中凋落物分解的影响

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Amazonian forest fragments and second-growth forests often differ substantially from undisturbed forests in their microclimate, plant-species composition, and soil fauna. To determine if these changes could affect litter decomposition, we quantified the mass loss of two contrasting leaf-litter mixtures, in the presence or absence of soil macroinvertebrates, and in three forest habitats. Leaf-litter decomposition rates in second-growth forests (> 10 years old) and in fragment edges (< 100 m from the edge) did not differ from that in the forest interior (> 250 in from the edges of primary forests). In all three habitats, experimental exclusion of soil invertebrates resulted in slower decomposition rates. Faunal-exclosure effects were stronger for litter of the primary forest, composed mostly of leaves of old-growth trees, than for litter of second-growth forests, which was dominated by leaves of successional species. The latter had a significantly lower initial concentration of N, higher C:N and lignin:N ratios, and decomposed at a slower rate than did litter from forest interiors. Our results indicate that land-cover changes in Amazonia affect decomposition mainly through changes in plant species composition, which in turn affect litter quality. Similar effects may occur on fragment edges, particularly on very disturbed edges, where successional trees become dominant. The drier microclimatic conditions in fragment edges and second-growth forests (>10 years old) did not appear to inhibit decomposition. Finally, although soil invertebrates play a key role in leaf-litter decomposition, we found no evidence that differences in the abundance, species richness, or species composition of invertebrates between disturbed and undisturbed forests significantly altered decomposition rates.
机译:亚马孙森林碎片和次生森林在小气候,植物物种组成和土壤动物方面通常与未受干扰的森林有很大不同。为了确定这些变化是否会影响凋落物的分解,我们对存在或不存在土壤无脊椎动物的情况以及在三个森林生境中两种形成鲜明对比的凋落物混合物的质量损失进行了量化。次生林(> 10年龄)和碎片边缘(距边缘<100 m)的凋落物分解速率与森林内部(距原始森林的边缘> 250 in)没有差异。在所有三个栖息地中,对土壤无脊椎动物的实验排除导致分解速率降低。与主要由演替树种的叶子支配的次生森林的凋落物相比,主要由陈年树木的叶子组成的原始森林的凋落物对动物的封闭作用更强。后者的氮的初始浓度明显降低,C:N和木质素:N的比率更高,并且分解速度比森林内部凋落物的分解速度慢。我们的结果表明,亚马逊地区的土地覆盖变化主要通过植物物种组成的变化影响分解,进而影响凋落物的质量。类似的效果可能发生在片段边缘上,尤其是在非常受干扰的边缘上,在这些边缘上连续树占优势。片段边缘和次生林(> 10年龄)中较干燥的微气候条件似乎并未抑制分解。最后,尽管土壤无脊椎动物在枯叶凋落物分解中起关键作用,但我们没有发现证据表明受干扰和未受干扰的森林之间无脊椎动物的丰度,物种丰富度或物种组成的差异会显着改变分解速率。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号