Evidence is growing that leaf litter generally decomposes faster than expected in its environment of origin, owing to specialization of litter and topsoil decomposer communities to break down litter encountered most often. Nevertheless, this home-field advantage (HFA) in decomposition is inconsistently supported by experimental data and fails to account for situations where contrasting qualities of litter coexist within the same litter matrix. In contrast to the HFA hypothesis, which expects a positive interaction between every litter species produced locally and the local decomposer communities irrespective of litter species quality, we define here an alternative substrate quality-matrix quality interaction (SMI) hypothesis that expects a ...
1. Leaf litter decomposition is a key process for nutrient cycling with broad ecosystem-level conseq...
The ‘home-field advantage (HFA) hypothesis’ predicts that plant litter is decomposed faster than exp...
Foliar functional traits have been shown to strongly co-vary with each other and with rates of litte...
Home-Field Advantage (HFA) defines the way with which a plant litter may decompose faster in the hab...
Plant litter decomposition is a key process in terrestrial carbon cycling, yet the relative importan...
Conceptual frameworks relating plant traits to ecosystem processes such as organic matter dynamics a...
Worldwide decomposition rates depend both on climate and the legacy of plant functional traits as li...
It is increasingly recognized that interactions between plants and soil (a)biotic conditions can inf...
Plant litter often decomposes faster in the habitat from which it was derived (i.e. home) than when ...
In addition to the effect of litter quality (LQ) on decomposition, increasing evidence is demonstrat...
Soil biota are increasingly recognized as a primary control on litter decomposition at both local an...
The 'home-field advantage' (HFA) hypothesis predicts that plant litter is decomposed faster than exp...
Background and Aims Litter often decomposes faster in its environment of origin (at ‘home’) than in ...
The ‘home-field advantage’ (HFA) hypothesis predicts that plant litter is decomposed faster than exp...
Worldwide decomposition rates depend both on climate and the legacy of plant functional traits as li...
1. Leaf litter decomposition is a key process for nutrient cycling with broad ecosystem-level conseq...
The ‘home-field advantage (HFA) hypothesis’ predicts that plant litter is decomposed faster than exp...
Foliar functional traits have been shown to strongly co-vary with each other and with rates of litte...
Home-Field Advantage (HFA) defines the way with which a plant litter may decompose faster in the hab...
Plant litter decomposition is a key process in terrestrial carbon cycling, yet the relative importan...
Conceptual frameworks relating plant traits to ecosystem processes such as organic matter dynamics a...
Worldwide decomposition rates depend both on climate and the legacy of plant functional traits as li...
It is increasingly recognized that interactions between plants and soil (a)biotic conditions can inf...
Plant litter often decomposes faster in the habitat from which it was derived (i.e. home) than when ...
In addition to the effect of litter quality (LQ) on decomposition, increasing evidence is demonstrat...
Soil biota are increasingly recognized as a primary control on litter decomposition at both local an...
The 'home-field advantage' (HFA) hypothesis predicts that plant litter is decomposed faster than exp...
Background and Aims Litter often decomposes faster in its environment of origin (at ‘home’) than in ...
The ‘home-field advantage’ (HFA) hypothesis predicts that plant litter is decomposed faster than exp...
Worldwide decomposition rates depend both on climate and the legacy of plant functional traits as li...
1. Leaf litter decomposition is a key process for nutrient cycling with broad ecosystem-level conseq...
The ‘home-field advantage (HFA) hypothesis’ predicts that plant litter is decomposed faster than exp...
Foliar functional traits have been shown to strongly co-vary with each other and with rates of litte...