2015
DOI: 10.1007/s11273-015-9459-6
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Plant community composition as a driver of decomposition dynamics in riparian wetlands

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Our findings of the tea and litter incubations imply that when flooding regimes change, decomposition will be directly affected by the new flooding conditions at a local scale (Wagner et al 2015). However, on larger spatio-temporal scales, the few examples using a chronosequence approach suggest that indirect effects via changes in species composition and biomass production may play an important additional role for litter accumulation in temperate zones (Britson et al 2016;Langhans et al 2008;Moore et al 2007;Vendrami et al 2012;Wardle et al 2004;Whittinghill et al 2014). Such vegetation change may drive changes in litter quality, which is known as key a driver of litter decomposition rates (Britson et al 2016;Cleveland et al 2014;Cornwell et al 2008;Makkonen et al 2012;Trofymow et al 2002).…”
Section: Implications For Upscalingmentioning
confidence: 74%
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“…Our findings of the tea and litter incubations imply that when flooding regimes change, decomposition will be directly affected by the new flooding conditions at a local scale (Wagner et al 2015). However, on larger spatio-temporal scales, the few examples using a chronosequence approach suggest that indirect effects via changes in species composition and biomass production may play an important additional role for litter accumulation in temperate zones (Britson et al 2016;Langhans et al 2008;Moore et al 2007;Vendrami et al 2012;Wardle et al 2004;Whittinghill et al 2014). Such vegetation change may drive changes in litter quality, which is known as key a driver of litter decomposition rates (Britson et al 2016;Cleveland et al 2014;Cornwell et al 2008;Makkonen et al 2012;Trofymow et al 2002).…”
Section: Implications For Upscalingmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…However, on larger spatio-temporal scales, the few examples using a chronosequence approach suggest that indirect effects via changes in species composition and biomass production may play an important additional role for litter accumulation in temperate zones (Britson et al 2016;Langhans et al 2008;Moore et al 2007;Vendrami et al 2012;Wardle et al 2004;Whittinghill et al 2014). Such vegetation change may drive changes in litter quality, which is known as key a driver of litter decomposition rates (Britson et al 2016;Cleveland et al 2014;Cornwell et al 2008;Makkonen et al 2012;Trofymow et al 2002). Since species composition only changes gradually (Ström et al 2011;Wright et al 2017) while the decomposition rates react directly to the new conditions, there may be a transitional unbalance between litter production and decomposition, temporally resulting in litter accumulation or a reduction of the litter layer.…”
Section: Implications For Upscalingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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