
Small‐scale and multi‐species approaches for assessing litter decomposition and soil dynamics in high‐diversity forests
Author(s) -
Martini Francesco,
Xia ShangWen,
Yang Xiaodong,
Goodale Uromi Manage
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
applications in plant sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.64
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 2168-0450
DOI - 10.1002/aps3.1241
Subject(s) - biology , plant litter , biomass (ecology) , litter , ecology , ecosystem , tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests , nutrient , temperate rainforest , nutrient cycle , forest ecology , phosphorus , soil biology , soil organic matter , soil water , subtropics , materials science , metallurgy
Premise of the Study The relationship between tree species abundance and diversity and soil chemistry has been studied in several ecosystems and at different spatial scales. However, species‐specific assessments have mainly been conducted in temperate ecosystems and in monospecific settings, calling for studies from diverse, mixed forests from different ecosystems. Methods In a subtropical forest in southern China, under four dominant tree canopy species ( Lithocarpus chintungensis , Castanopsis wattii , Schima noronhae , and Manglietia insignis ), we assessed species’ effect on inter‐ and intraspecific percentages of litter mass loss, and the effect of species on soil nutrients and soil microbial biomass. Results Our results show significant differences in litter decomposition for all four species; however, the percentage of litter mass loss was stable under different species. Microbial biomass and soil nutrients presented strong differences under different tree species. Species‐specific differences in soil characteristics were seen for carbon‐nitrogen‐phosphorus relationships. Surprisingly, the correlations between carbon and phosphorus and between nitrogen and phosphorus showed opposite slopes in soils collected under different tree species. Discussion Our results provide insights into the importance of tree species identity in providing variety to ecosystem processes occurring on the forest floor. We recommend this methodological approach—combining analysis of litter decomposition, soil nutrient concentrations, and microbial biomass—when dealing with species‐rich forests.