2014
DOI: 10.5194/we-14-13-2014
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The effect of mixtures on colonisation of leaf litter decomposing in a stream and at its riparian zone

Abstract: Abstract. The effect of mixing litter on decomposition and colonisation has been the focus of many studies carried independently in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Those studies are carried out in different regions, use different experimental protocols and methodologies for the assessment of additive or non-additive effects, and the conclusions on the effect of mixtures vary accordingly. In this study I tested the hypothesis, via a short-term decomposition experiment, that, when using the same experimental… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The flux of leaf litter to streams has strong bottom‐up effects because it enters at low trophic levels in the recipient food webs (Allen & Wesner, ), but the degree of integration can depend on the characteristics of the litter introduced (Gounand, Little, Harvey, & Altermatt, ). During periods of terrestrial exposure, leaf litter may have been already decomposing (Abelho, , ) and is likely to constitute a resource differing notably in quality from leaf litter falling directly into the water.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The flux of leaf litter to streams has strong bottom‐up effects because it enters at low trophic levels in the recipient food webs (Allen & Wesner, ), but the degree of integration can depend on the characteristics of the litter introduced (Gounand, Little, Harvey, & Altermatt, ). During periods of terrestrial exposure, leaf litter may have been already decomposing (Abelho, , ) and is likely to constitute a resource differing notably in quality from leaf litter falling directly into the water.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Comparisons between terrestrial and aquatic decomposition have been mostly carried out in small-scale studies (e.g. Hutchens & Wallace 2002;Harner et al 2009;Abelho 2014) or on basis of published work (Gessner et al 2010). However, comparisons between terrestrial and aquatic decomposition across broad spatial scales are scarce (Handa et al 2014), and the use of nonstandard methodologies and different experimental protocols in terrestrial and aquatic studies limit our ability to generalize from published studies.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%