International audienceRates of leaf litter decomposition in streams are strongly influenced both by inorganic nutrients dissolved in stream water and by litter traits such as lignin, nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) concentrations. As a result, decomposition rates of different leaf species can show contrasting responses to stream nutrient enrichment resulting from human activities. It is unclear, however, whether the root cause of such discrepancies in field observations is the interspecific variation in either litter nutrient or litter lignin concentrations. To address this question, we conducted a controlled laboratory experiment with a known fungal community to determine decomposition rates of 38 leaf species exhibiting contrasting litter...
1. We investigated the effect of trophic status on the organic matter budget in freshwater ecosystem...
Detrital food webs of woodland streams depend on terrestrial litter input and, thus, are susceptibl...
Aim Leaf litter decomposition in freshwater ecosystems is a vital process linking ecosystem nutrient...
International audienceRates of leaf litter decomposition in streams are strongly influenced both by ...
Nutrient enrichment and changes inripariantree species compositionaffectmany streams worldwide but ...
1. We are facing major biodiversity loss and there is evidence that such loss can alter ecosystem fu...
International audienceThe trophic state of many streams is likely to deteriorate in the future due t...
The breakdown of leaf litter in streams is influenced strongly by leaf quality and the concentration...
1. We are facing major biodiversity loss and there is evidence that such loss can alter ecosystem fu...
Este artículo contiene 14 páginas, 4 figuras, 1 tabla.The present study aims to understand how micr...
Biodiversity and ecosystem-functioning theory suggest that litter mixtures composed of dissimilar le...
Organic matter may sequester nutrients as it decomposes, increasing in total N and P mass via multip...
J. Jesús Casas et al.Terrestrial plant litter is important in sustaining stream food webs in foreste...
Litter decomposition is an ecological process of key importance for forest headwater stream function...
1. We investigated the effect of trophic status on the organic matter budget in freshwater ecosystem...
Detrital food webs of woodland streams depend on terrestrial litter input and, thus, are susceptibl...
Aim Leaf litter decomposition in freshwater ecosystems is a vital process linking ecosystem nutrient...
International audienceRates of leaf litter decomposition in streams are strongly influenced both by ...
Nutrient enrichment and changes inripariantree species compositionaffectmany streams worldwide but ...
1. We are facing major biodiversity loss and there is evidence that such loss can alter ecosystem fu...
International audienceThe trophic state of many streams is likely to deteriorate in the future due t...
The breakdown of leaf litter in streams is influenced strongly by leaf quality and the concentration...
1. We are facing major biodiversity loss and there is evidence that such loss can alter ecosystem fu...
Este artículo contiene 14 páginas, 4 figuras, 1 tabla.The present study aims to understand how micr...
Biodiversity and ecosystem-functioning theory suggest that litter mixtures composed of dissimilar le...
Organic matter may sequester nutrients as it decomposes, increasing in total N and P mass via multip...
J. Jesús Casas et al.Terrestrial plant litter is important in sustaining stream food webs in foreste...
Litter decomposition is an ecological process of key importance for forest headwater stream function...
1. We investigated the effect of trophic status on the organic matter budget in freshwater ecosystem...
Detrital food webs of woodland streams depend on terrestrial litter input and, thus, are susceptibl...
Aim Leaf litter decomposition in freshwater ecosystems is a vital process linking ecosystem nutrient...