Decomposition of plant litter is a key control over carbon (C) storage in the soil. The biochemistry of the litter being produced, the environment in which the decomposition is taking place, and the community composition and metabolism of the decomposer organisms exert a combined influence over decomposition rates. As deciduous shrubs and trees are expanding into tundra ecosystems as a result of regional climate warming, this change in vegetation represents a change in litter input to tundra soils and a change in the environment in which litter decomposes. To test the importance of litter biochemistry and environment in determining litter mass loss, we reciprocally transplanted litter between heath (Empetrum nigrum), shrub (Betula nana), an...
Global climate has been warming up for the last decades and it will continue in this century. The Ar...
Deciduous shrub abundance is increasing in tundra ecosystems as an effect of rising temperatures whi...
The ‘home-field advantage’ (HFA) hypothesis predicts that plant litter is decomposed faster than exp...
Decomposition of plant litter is a key control over carbon (C) storage in the soil. The biochemistry...
Decomposition of plant litter is a key control over carbon (C) storage in the soil. The biochemistry...
Decomposition of plant litter is a key control over carbon (C) storage in the soil. The biochemistry...
In tundra ecosystems, global warming is expected to accelerate litter decomposition and to lead to s...
Rapid climate change in the Arctic and Sub-Arctic is causing vegetation change across large areas of...
Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2017. This article is posted here by permission of...
Litter decomposition is a key process in terrestrial ecosystems, releasing nutrients, returning CO 2...
Aims: Litter decomposition is an important driver of soil carbon and nutrient cycling in nutrient-li...
Decomposition of plant litter regulates nutrient cycling and transfers of fixed carbon to soil organ...
Climate warming at high northern latitudes has caused substantial increases in plant productivity of...
Tundra soils are one of the world's largest organic carbon stores, yet this carbon is vulnerable to ...
Historically, slow decomposition rates have resulted in the accumulation of large amounts of carbon ...
Global climate has been warming up for the last decades and it will continue in this century. The Ar...
Deciduous shrub abundance is increasing in tundra ecosystems as an effect of rising temperatures whi...
The ‘home-field advantage’ (HFA) hypothesis predicts that plant litter is decomposed faster than exp...
Decomposition of plant litter is a key control over carbon (C) storage in the soil. The biochemistry...
Decomposition of plant litter is a key control over carbon (C) storage in the soil. The biochemistry...
Decomposition of plant litter is a key control over carbon (C) storage in the soil. The biochemistry...
In tundra ecosystems, global warming is expected to accelerate litter decomposition and to lead to s...
Rapid climate change in the Arctic and Sub-Arctic is causing vegetation change across large areas of...
Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2017. This article is posted here by permission of...
Litter decomposition is a key process in terrestrial ecosystems, releasing nutrients, returning CO 2...
Aims: Litter decomposition is an important driver of soil carbon and nutrient cycling in nutrient-li...
Decomposition of plant litter regulates nutrient cycling and transfers of fixed carbon to soil organ...
Climate warming at high northern latitudes has caused substantial increases in plant productivity of...
Tundra soils are one of the world's largest organic carbon stores, yet this carbon is vulnerable to ...
Historically, slow decomposition rates have resulted in the accumulation of large amounts of carbon ...
Global climate has been warming up for the last decades and it will continue in this century. The Ar...
Deciduous shrub abundance is increasing in tundra ecosystems as an effect of rising temperatures whi...
The ‘home-field advantage’ (HFA) hypothesis predicts that plant litter is decomposed faster than exp...