2018
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2435.13057
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Negative effects of litter richness on root decomposition in the presence of detritivores

Abstract: Decomposition is a vital process underlying many ecosystem functions. Although a growing number of studies have tested how litter richness affects the decomposition of above‐ground plant organs, knowledge remains limited about the decomposition of root mixtures. Here, we used a field experiment in a subtropical forest to investigate how species richness in root litter mixtures (air‐dried fresh fine roots) affects the decomposition of root litter material. On the basis of the concept of resource complementarity… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The ratio of species in the mixture is not always 50% -50% (Montané et al, 2013;Wu et al, 2014). Litterbag placement is customarily in the litter layer, yet, occasionally litterbags are buried in the soil (Li et al, 2018;Poffenbarger et al, 2015;Prieto et al, 2017). A study comparing litterbags placed at the littermineral soil interface to litterbags placed on top of the litter layer showed additive mass loss at the litter-soil interface whereas the same mixtures showed non-additive mass loss on top of the litter layer (Conn and Dighton, 2000).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ratio of species in the mixture is not always 50% -50% (Montané et al, 2013;Wu et al, 2014). Litterbag placement is customarily in the litter layer, yet, occasionally litterbags are buried in the soil (Li et al, 2018;Poffenbarger et al, 2015;Prieto et al, 2017). A study comparing litterbags placed at the littermineral soil interface to litterbags placed on top of the litter layer showed additive mass loss at the litter-soil interface whereas the same mixtures showed non-additive mass loss on top of the litter layer (Conn and Dighton, 2000).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%