In natural ecosystems plant litter is typically a mixture of more than one species and the rate of decomposition can be faster (synergistic) or slower (antagonistic) than the average of its component species(non-additive effects). We analysed the decomposition rates of two-species mixtures to determine if there were consistent non-additive effects of litter mixing on decomposition and how do they compare with the effects of species identity on mixture decomposition. Then we tested if non-additive effects were consistently associated with the presence of particular species in the mixture, to the combination of Fast-or Slow-decomposing species, or to initial litter quality of mixtures. We found: (a) that species identity was the primary deter...
Litter decomposition, a major determinant of ecosystem functioning, is strongly influenced by the li...
Most studies on the importance of litter diversity to decomposition processes have examined effects ...
Evidence is growing that leaf litter generally decomposes faster than expected in its environment of...
Different components of functional biodiversity, such as functional type richness and composition, h...
In biodiverse ecosystems, leaf litter of different plant species decomposes in mixtures, for which d...
The biodiversity of litter can regulate carbon and nutrient cycling during mixed decomposition. It i...
The mass loss of litter mixtures is often different than expected based on the mass loss of the comp...
Biodiversity and ecosystem-functioning theory suggest that litter mixtures composed of dissimilar le...
Aims: The effects of litter diversity on litter decomposition remain debated. We tested to what exte...
A common hypothesis to explain the effect of litter mixing is based on the difference in litter N co...
We tested the hypothesis that interactions in litter mixtures (expressed as the difference between o...
Plant species diversity and identity can significantly modify litter decomposition, but the und...
1. Leaf litter decomposition is a key process for nutrient cycling with broad ecosystem-level conseq...
Changes in nitrogen (N) deposition and litter mixtures have been shown to influence ecosystem proces...
Many studies across a range of ecosystems have shown that decomposition in mixed litter is not predi...
Litter decomposition, a major determinant of ecosystem functioning, is strongly influenced by the li...
Most studies on the importance of litter diversity to decomposition processes have examined effects ...
Evidence is growing that leaf litter generally decomposes faster than expected in its environment of...
Different components of functional biodiversity, such as functional type richness and composition, h...
In biodiverse ecosystems, leaf litter of different plant species decomposes in mixtures, for which d...
The biodiversity of litter can regulate carbon and nutrient cycling during mixed decomposition. It i...
The mass loss of litter mixtures is often different than expected based on the mass loss of the comp...
Biodiversity and ecosystem-functioning theory suggest that litter mixtures composed of dissimilar le...
Aims: The effects of litter diversity on litter decomposition remain debated. We tested to what exte...
A common hypothesis to explain the effect of litter mixing is based on the difference in litter N co...
We tested the hypothesis that interactions in litter mixtures (expressed as the difference between o...
Plant species diversity and identity can significantly modify litter decomposition, but the und...
1. Leaf litter decomposition is a key process for nutrient cycling with broad ecosystem-level conseq...
Changes in nitrogen (N) deposition and litter mixtures have been shown to influence ecosystem proces...
Many studies across a range of ecosystems have shown that decomposition in mixed litter is not predi...
Litter decomposition, a major determinant of ecosystem functioning, is strongly influenced by the li...
Most studies on the importance of litter diversity to decomposition processes have examined effects ...
Evidence is growing that leaf litter generally decomposes faster than expected in its environment of...