<P>This fully revised and updated 2nd edition of Plant Litter focuses on decomposition processes in natural terrestrial systems such as boreal and temperate forests. The availability of several long-term studies from these forest types allows a more in-depth approach to the later stages of decomposi
PLANT LITTER : decomposition, humus formation, carbon sequestration.
â Scribed by BJRN BERG
- Publisher
- SPRINGER
- Year
- 2020
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 342
- Edition
- 4
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
⊠Table of Contents
Preface
Contents
1 Introduction
1.1 Overview of Plant Litter Decomposition
1.2 AÂ Short Retrospective
1.3 The Ecological Significance of Litter Decomposition and the Formation of Humus
1.4 Factors Influencing Decay and Humus Formation
1.5 Accumulation of Humus and Nutrients
1.6 The Contents and Organization of the Book
1.7 Motives for the Present Synthesis
1.8 New Developments Included in the Fourth Edition
References
2 Decomposition as a Processâsome Main Features
2.1 Litter Decompositionâa Set of Different Processes Including Synthesis of New Compounds
2.2 Definition of Litter Decomposition
2.3 Ash Dynamics
2.4 Nutrients Limiting for Litter Decompositionâsome Observations
2.5 Degradation of the Main Groups of Organic Compounds in Foliar Litter
2.5.1 Degradation and Leaching of Soluble Organic Substances
2.5.2 Degradation of Non-Lignified Organic Substances
2.5.3 A Pattern of Degradation of the Main Organic Compounds in Pine Needle Litter
2.5.4 Some Chemical Changes during Decomposition that May Be in common for Foliar Litter over Species and Genera
2.5.5 Pattern for Main Organic Compounds Based on AURâGravimetric Analyses of Lignin
2.5.6 13C-NMR Analysis Applied to Decomposing Foliar Litter
2.6 Factors Regulating Degradation of Lignin/AUR
2.6.1 Potential Effects and Possible Interactions on Lignin/AUR Degradation
2.6.2 Effects of Litter Mn Concentration on Lignin/AUR Degradation and Litter Mass Loss
2.6.3 Effects of N on Lignin/AUR and Late-Stage Litter Degradation
2.7 Proposed Models for Decomposition from Newly Shed Foliar Litter to the Humus Stage
2.7.1 Three-Stage Model
2.7.2 The Two-Stage Model
2.7.3 In common for both Modelsâthe Humus-Near or Limit-Value Stage
References
3 Decomposer Organisms
3.1 Introduction
3.2 General Properties of a Given Microbial Population
3.3 The Degradation of the Main Polymers in Litter
3.3.1 Degradation of Cellulose
3.3.2 Degradation of Hemicelluloses
3.3.3 Degradation of Lignin
3.4 Degradation of Fibers
3.4.1 Bacteria
3.4.2 Soft-Rot
3.4.3 Brown-Rot
3.4.4 White-Rot
3.5 Mycorrhizae
3.6 Ecological Aspects
References
4 Initial Litter Chemical Composition
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Organic Chemical Components of Plant Litter and Fiber Structure
4.2.1 Organic Chemical Components
4.2.2 Fiber Structure
4.3 Nutrient and Heavy Metal Concentrations in Newly Shed Litter
4.3.1 General Features
4.3.2 Nutrient Resorption and Withdrawal Efficiency
4.3.3 Nutrient Concentration Change; Green Foliage versus Brown Litter
4.4 Factors Influencing Litter Chemical Composition
4.4.1 General Factors
4.4.2 Nutrients, Heavy Metals, and AUR in Needle Litter of two Conifers, Pine, and Spruce Sppâtwo Case Studies in Climate Gradients
4.4.3 Influence of Soil Properties
4.4.4 Influence of Tree Age
4.5 Several Deciduous and Coniferous Leaf Litter Species
4.5.1 Variation in a EurasianâGlobal GradientâFocus on Nitrogen
4.5.2 Coniferous versus Deciduous Genera/Species and Influence of Speciesâan Old Concept
4.5.3 General and Global Relationships
4.6 Wood, Cones, and Fine-Root Litter
4.7 Anthropogenic Influences on Initial Litter Composition
4.7.1 N-Fertilized Scots Pine and Norway Spruce Monocultures
References
5 Changes in Substrate Composition During Decomposition
5.1 Introductory Comments
5.2 Organic Chemical Changes during Litter Decomposition
5.2.1 Traditional Analytical Fractions
5.2.2 Relationships between Holocellulose and AUR
5.2.3 13CâNMR Technique
5.3 The Dynamics of Mn, Ca, K, and N
5.3.1 Manganese Dynamics
5.3.2 Calcium Dynamics
5.3.3 Potassium Dynamics
5.3.4 Nitrogen Concentration Dynamics over a Climatic Gradient
5.4 A Special Study on Minor Elements/Heavy MetalsâEarly to Late-Stage Decomposition
5.4.1 Concentration Dynamics
References
6 Role of Chemical Constituents in Regulating Decay Rates and Stable Fractions: Effects of Initial and Changing Chemical Composition on Decomposition and Organic Matter Accumulation
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Some Nutrients and Compounds in Litter Influencing Decomposition Rates
6.3 Two Models with three and two Stages Applied to Litter Species of Different Chemical Composition
6.3.1 AÂ Three-Phase ModelâLitter Decomposition Pattern Type I
6.3.2 AÂ Two-Phase ModelâLitter Decomposition Pattern Type II
6.3.3 Decomposition Related to Lignin Monomers across Litter Speciesâa Molecular Level and a Possible Relationship to N
6.3.4 Some Comparisons of Effects of Mn and N in Lignin-Dominated PhasesâLitter Decomposition Pattern Type I versus Type II
6.4 Decomposition in Early and Late Stages as Related to 13C-NMR Analysis
6.5 Litter at the Humus-Near or Limit-Value Stage
6.5.1 General Comments
6.5.2 General Relationships
6.5.3 Do Limit Values Indicate a Stable Fraction? Can we Relate a Production of Leachable Organic Components from the Stable Fraction to Litter Chemistry?
References
7 Climate Gradients. Substrate Quality versus Climate and their Interactions
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Microbial Response to Temperature and Moisture
7.3 How Sensitive to Climate is Decomposition of Foliar Litter?
7.4 Litter and Litter Fractions Dominated by Lignified Tissue
7.4.1 Decomposition of Type II versus Climate and Substrate in Foliar Litter
7.4.2 Decomposition Type I of Foliar Litter, Late Stage versus Climate and Substrate Quality
7.5 Decomposition Dominated by Non-Lignified TissueâDecomposition Type I in the Early Stage
7.5.1 Local Scots Pine and Pine Species Litterâa North European Climate Gradient
7.5.2 Unified Scots Pine Litter in a EuropeanâNorth American Climate Gradient
7.5.3 Multispecies to Genera. A Gradient across Asia and EuropeâFirst-Year Mass Loss
7.6 Root Decomposition along Climate GradientsâFirst-Year Mass Loss
7.6.1 Scots Pine, Lodgepole Pine, and Norway Spruce, Combined Data and Single Species
7.6.2 Several Species
7.7 Two Northern European Climatic Gradients
References
8 Decomposition of Root Tips, Fine Roots, and Coarse Roots
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Root Classification and Properties
8.3 Methods to Study Roots
8.3.1 Amount of Fine Roots
8.3.2 Decomposition of Roots
8.4 Root TipsâClass 1 Rootsâand their Decomposition. Early and Late Stages as well as Limit Values
8.4.1 Initial Chemical Composition
8.4.2 Decomposition Patterns and Rates versus Substrate Quality and Climate Factors. A Model for Rate-Regulating Factors
8.5 Root Decomposition, Early and Late Stages as well as Limit Values for Fine Roots, Classes 1 thru 6
8.5.1 Some General Patterns across Root Classes 1 thru 6
8.6 Decomposition of Fine and Coarse RootsâStudies Based on Root Diameter
8.6.1 Mass-Loss Rates and Decomposition PatternsâClimatic Gradients and Global Data
8.6.2 Changes in Chemical Composition
8.7 Conceptual Models for Root Decomposition
References
9 Decomposition of Cones and Woody Litter
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Inputs to the Forest FloorâCones and Twigs/Branches
9.3 ConesâDecomposition
9.3.1 Experimental Design and Sampling
9.3.2 Mass Loss and Chemical Changes
9.4 Woody LitterâDecomposition
9.4.1 Methods
9.4.2 Decomposition Rates versus Climate
9.4.3 Carbon Dioxide Release
9.4.4 Organic Chemical Changes
9.4.5 Changes in Nutrient Concentrations
References
10 Models that Describe Decomposition of Foliar Litter and Roots
10.1 Introduction
10.2 Two Commonly Used Models
10.3 Models
10.3.1 Single Exponential
10.3.2 Asymptotic Models
10.4 Some Dominant Influencing Factors Related to Type of Model
10.4.1 The Three-Stage Model (Decomposition Type I) May Be Useful to Clarify Details in the Concept âDecomposition Pattern.â
10.4.2 The Two-Stage Model May Be Useful to Clarify Details in Decomposition Pattern Type II for Foliar Litter
10.4.3 Model for Class 1 Roots
10.5 Degradation of Specific Bonds May Be Followed and their Rates Calculated (13C-NMR)
10.6 Influences on the Limit-Value Stage plus Variation in PatternâGeneral Relationships
References
11 What Factors May Influence the Accumulation of Humus Layers?
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Accumulation of Stabilized Humus/Carbon in Organic Layers of Boreal and Temperate Forests
11.2.1 Humus and Organic LayersâDo they Increase in a Predictable Way?
11.3 Variation in Carbon Sequestration Rates; Effects of Tree Species, Soil Properties and N Fertilizer on the Organic Layer
11.3.1 General Comments
11.3.2 Large-Scale Comparisons among Tree Species over Northern Europe
11.3.3 Accumulation of SOM-C. Coniferous Forests in Climate Gradients
11.3.4 Are there Effects of N Fertilizer?
11.3.5 Effects of Soil Texture and Mineral Soil Nutrients and Organic Layers
11.3.6 Humus Layer Stability versus its Turnover
11.4 Carbon in the Mineral Soil
11.4.1 Does the Amount of Organic Matter in the Mineral Soil Change?
11.4.2 Organic Matter Mixed into the Mineral Soil
11.4.3 Is there any Effect of Disturbance?
References
12 Estimating Carbon Sequestration Rates on a Regional Scale
12.1 Long-Term Accumulation of Carbon in Organic Layers (O Horizon)âGeneral Comments
12.2 Influences on Carbon Sequestration Rates in Forested LandâRegional Level
12.2.1 Influences at Undisturbed Sites and Anthropogenic Influence
12.2.2 General Consideration as Regards a Database for Regional Modeling
12.3 Two Case Studies
12.4 Case Study for a Region. Remaining Stable Fractionâa Theory and a Possible Regional Approach
12.4.1 Short Background
12.4.2 Geographical Database
12.4.3 Potential Carbon Sequestration Rates and Effect of Tree Species
12.4.4 The Effect of Tree Species on Carbon Sequestration Rates in the Humus Layer
12.4.5 Error Sources in the Limit-Value Approach
12.5 Case Study for a RegionâDirect Measurements of Humus Depth
12.5.1 Background
12.5.2 General Design of the Humus Inventory
12.5.3 Scaling up from Field Measurements on Humus Depth in Plots to C Sequestered on Country LevelâOverview
12.5.4 Changes in Organic Layer Thickness over Time
12.5.5 Calculations of Carbon Bulk Density in the Humus Layer
12.5.6 Calculated Carbon Sequestration Rates, some Patterns, and their Possible Causes
12.5.7 Possible Sources of Error in Estimates of Carbon Sequestration Rates
12.5.8 Manganese Concentration in the Humus Layer Is Related to Higher Humus Decomposition Rates
12.6 Carbon Sequestration Rates in the Case Studies Compared to Quantitative Measurements in single Stands and Chronosequences as well as among them
12.6.1 Gravimetric Measurements
12.6.2 Carbon Dioxide Budgets
12.7 Carbon Sequestration in Mineral SoilâObservations on a Regional Scale
12.7.1 Different Sequestration Patterns?
12.8 Regional Carbon Sequestration in a Global Context
References
13 Comments on Methods for Litter Decomposition Studies
13.1 Introduction
13.2 Design of Litterbag Experiments and some Calculations
13.3 Overview of Common Analytical Methods for Organic Compounds in Litter with Focus on Lignin
13.3.1 Introduction
13.3.2 Methods for AUR, Lignin, and Carbohydrates
13.4 What Information May the Different Approaches Give?
13.4.1 Comments on Information we Can Reach at present
References
Appendix A Scientific Names of Vascular Plants
Gymnosperms
Angiosperms
-4pt- Glossary
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