Rates of decomposition in Arctic soils are regulated by temperature and moisture, but substrate availability is dictated by vegetation inputs, which are also subject to biotic influences. Here, we examine how leaf and litter inputs from individual dwarf shrub species influence soil enzyme activity in a sub-Arctic heath community in Abisko, Sweden. We further consider how foliar damage via insect herbivory (and outbreak) affects the soil community and decomposition. During the peak growing season (July 2011), we assessed how shrub community composition (Empetrum hermaphroditum, Vaccinium myrtillus, V. uliginosum and V. vitis-idaea) determined litter and soil phenol oxidase activity. A periodic severe outbreak of autumn moth larvae (Epirrita ...
Warming may increase the extent and intensity of insect defoliations within Arctic ecosystems. A tho...
Herbivores can exert major controls over biogeochemical cycling. As invertebrates are highly sensiti...
The consequences of warming-induced ‘shrubification’ on Arctic soil carbon storage are receiving inc...
Rates of decomposition in Arctic soils are regulated by temperature and moisture, but substrate avai...
Rates of decomposition in arctic soils are regulated by temperature and moisture but substrate avail...
Abstract Tree mortality from insect infestations can significantly reduce carbon storage in forest ...
Tree mortality from insect infestations can significantly reduce carbon storage in forest soils. In ...
Plant exposure to enhanced UV-B radiation typically induces changes in leaf secondary metabolite pro...
1. Outbreaks of herbivorous insects can have large impacts on regional soil carbon (C) storage and n...
Insect herbivory is known to augment emissions of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs). Yet f...
Mountain birch forests (Betula pubescens Ehrh. ssp. czerepanovii) at the subarctic treeline not only...
Tiivistelmä/Referat – Abstract Global warming and its coinstantaneous disturbance are intensively...
The ongoing shrubification of the Arctic tundra may in the future have serious consequences for the ...
Herbivory can influence ecosystem processes, partly through long-term changes of the plant community...
According to the exploitation ecosystem hypothesis (EEH), terrestrial ecosystems are characterized b...
Warming may increase the extent and intensity of insect defoliations within Arctic ecosystems. A tho...
Herbivores can exert major controls over biogeochemical cycling. As invertebrates are highly sensiti...
The consequences of warming-induced ‘shrubification’ on Arctic soil carbon storage are receiving inc...
Rates of decomposition in Arctic soils are regulated by temperature and moisture, but substrate avai...
Rates of decomposition in arctic soils are regulated by temperature and moisture but substrate avail...
Abstract Tree mortality from insect infestations can significantly reduce carbon storage in forest ...
Tree mortality from insect infestations can significantly reduce carbon storage in forest soils. In ...
Plant exposure to enhanced UV-B radiation typically induces changes in leaf secondary metabolite pro...
1. Outbreaks of herbivorous insects can have large impacts on regional soil carbon (C) storage and n...
Insect herbivory is known to augment emissions of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs). Yet f...
Mountain birch forests (Betula pubescens Ehrh. ssp. czerepanovii) at the subarctic treeline not only...
Tiivistelmä/Referat – Abstract Global warming and its coinstantaneous disturbance are intensively...
The ongoing shrubification of the Arctic tundra may in the future have serious consequences for the ...
Herbivory can influence ecosystem processes, partly through long-term changes of the plant community...
According to the exploitation ecosystem hypothesis (EEH), terrestrial ecosystems are characterized b...
Warming may increase the extent and intensity of insect defoliations within Arctic ecosystems. A tho...
Herbivores can exert major controls over biogeochemical cycling. As invertebrates are highly sensiti...
The consequences of warming-induced ‘shrubification’ on Arctic soil carbon storage are receiving inc...