| Literature DB >> 35047237 |
Peng Zan1,2, Zijun Mao1,2, Tao Sun3.
Abstract
Litter quality and climate have been presumed to be the dominant factors regulating litter decomposition rates on broad spatial scales. However, the role of soil fauna on litter decomposition is poorly understood, despite the fact that it could strongly influence decomposition by fragmentation and subsequent modification of the activities of microorganisms.In this study, we carried out a meta-analysis on the effects of soil fauna on litter decomposition rates in Chinese forests, ranging from boreal to tropical forests, based on data from 20 studies. The effects of climatic factors on decomposition rate were assessed by comparing the contribution of soil fauna to litter decomposition from studies carried out at different latitudes.The degree of influence of the soil fauna was in the order tropical (200%) > subtropical (47%) > temperate forest (28%). Comparing the effect size of soil fauna, it was found that when soil fauna was excluded, the decomposition rate, calculated using Olson's equation, was most affected in tropical forest (-0.77), while the litter decomposition rate both subtropical (-0.36) and temperate forest (-0.19) were also suppressed to varying degrees (P < 0.001). These results highlight that soil fauna could promote litter decomposition to different extents. Using stepwise multiple linear regression, the effect size of the soil fauna was negatively correlated with the cellulose and nitrogen concentrations of the initial litter material. In Chinese forests, litter decomposition rates were reduced, on average, by 65% when soil fauna was excluded. The impact of soil fauna on decomposition was shown to be closely related to climate and litter quality. ©2022 Zan et al.Entities:
Keywords: Cellulose; Climate; Litter quality; Nitrogen; Size effect
Year: 2022 PMID: 35047237 PMCID: PMC8757372 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.12747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Map showing the location of 20 independent study sites in analysis.
■ Study sites in temperate forests, ▴ study sites in tropical forests, and • study sites in subtropic forests.
Figure 2Mean effect size of soil fauna exclusion on litter decomposition rates at nationwide scale (n= 126), tropical forests (n= 6), subtropical forests (n= 57), temperate forests (n= 63).
The bars around the means are standard deviation. The negative effect size indicates that litter decomposition is slower without soil fauna.
Figure 3The relationships between initial litter quality and ES.
(A) Mean annual temperature; (B) Mean annual precipitation; (C) Nitrogen content (%); (D) Cellulose content (%); (E) Lignin content (%); (F) Lignin/Cellulose ratio; (G) Lignin/N ratio; (H) C/N ratio; (I) N/P ratio.
Best-fit multiple regressions of litter decomposition with litter quality and climatic factors across all studies.
| Model equation |
|
|
|
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| Environmental climatic variables only: | 125 | 0.131 | 0.361 | <0.0001 |
| Leaf quality variables only: | 44 | 0.455 | 0.675 | <0.0001 |
| Combined leaf quality and climate variables: | 44 | 0.538 | 0.734 | <0.0001 |