Leaf litter processing rates and fungal biomass on leaf detritus were compared in four streams of different water chemistry. The streams drained catchments underlain by different bedrock types and varied in mean pH from 4 .3 to 7 .5 and in mean alkalinity from 0 .0 to 35 .8 mg CaCO3 1 -' . Processin
Leaf litter processing and exoenzyme production on leaves in streams of different pH
β Scribed by Michael B. Griffith; Sue A. Perry; William B. Perry
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 778 KB
- Volume
- 102
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0029-8549
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
We examined microbial colonization, exoenzyme activity, and processing of leaves of yellow poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera), red maple (Acer rubrum), and white oak (Quercus alba) in three streams on the Allegheny Plateau of West Virginia, United States. Leaf packs were placed in streams that varied in their underlying bedrock geology, and therefore in their sensitivity to the high level of acidic precipitation that occurs in this region. The mean pH of the streams was 4.3 in the South Fork of Red Run (SFR), 6.2 in Wilson Hollow Run (WHR), and 7.7 in the North Fork of Hickman Slide Run (HSR). Through time, the patterns of microbial biomass and exoenzyme activity were generally similar among leaf species, but the magnitude of microbial biomass and exoenzyme activity differed among leaf species. Pectinase activity was greatest in HSR, the most alkaline stream, whereas the activity of exocellulase and xylanase was greatest in WHR and SFR, the intermediate and acidic streams. This variation in the activity of different exoenzymes was consistent with published pH optima for these exoenzymes. Variation in processing rates, both among leaf species and among streams, seems to be related to the level of microbial exoenzyme activity on the leaf detritus.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Leaf breakdown of two riparian tree species, Cunonia capensis L. and Ilex mitis (L .) Radlk . was investigated in vitro at Window Stream, Table Mountain, using three different designs of litter bag . Breakdown of Cunonia and flex in coarse-mesh (5 mm) litter bags was very rapid (respectively 14 .79
## Abstract Understanding how species loss influences ecosystem function is a contemporary issue in ecology. However, most research has focused on species loss at one trophicβlevel. We explored the relationship between functional diversity (FD) and species richness separately for trees and aquatic
We investigated the effect of increased N-supply on productivity and potential litter decay rates of Carex species, which are the dominant vascular plant species in peatlands in the Netherlands. We hypothesized that: (1) under conditions of N-limited plant growth, increased N-supply will lead to inc