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Leaf litter decomposition of tree species in three successional phases of tropical dry secondary forest in Campeche, Mexico

Tipo de material: Artículo
 impreso(a) 
 
  y electrónico  
  Artículo impreso(a) y electrónico Idioma: Inglés Tema(s) en español: Clasificación:
  • AR/577.30913 L4
Recurso en línea: Formatos físicos adicionales disponibles:
  • Disponible en línea
En: Forest Ecology and Management volumen 174, número 1-3 (February 2003), páginas 401-412Nota de acceso: Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso Resumen:
Inglés

Leaf litter decomposition rate and nitrogen, carbon and phosphorous (NCP) concentration of three species: Croton lundellii Standl., Metopium brownei (Jacq.) Urban and Manilkara zapota (L.) van Royen were evaluated in different phases of development (3, 13 and >50 years old) of secondary dry forest in Campeche, Mexico, to test two hypotheses: (1) leaf decomposition rate is higher in older successional stages of secondary dry forest; (2) decomposition rate is more rapid in pioneer species than late successional species, because of differences in substrate quality. The litterbag method was employed to evaluate decomposition. Results indicated that decomposition was related to forest development phase but the strongest influence was due to leaf chemical composition. Decomposition was fastest in C. lundellii, intermediate in M. brownei and slowest in M. zapota. The C/N, C/P ratios and total N and P concentrations were good indicators of decomposition rates across species in all successional stages. In comparing leaf litter collected locally and decomposed in situ, the earlier successional phase showed higher decomposition rates than later stages of succession. Neither N concentration or C/N ratio explained this difference, but it was correlated with higher P concentration.

Número de sistema: 28728
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Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Colección Signatura topográfica Info Vol Estado Código de barras
Artículos Biblioteca Campeche Artículos (AR) ECOSUR AR 577.30913 L4 001 Disponible ECO040001324
Artículos Biblioteca Campeche Artículos (AR) ECOSUR AR 577.30913 L4/EJ. 2 007 Disponible ECO040001447
Artículos Biblioteca Campeche Artículos (AR) ECOSUR AR 577.30913 L4/EJ. 3 009 Disponible ECO040000272
Artículos Biblioteca Chetumal Artículos (AR) ECOSUR AR 577.30913 L4/EJ. 2 005 Disponible ECO030000179
Artículos Biblioteca Chetumal Artículos (AR) ECOSUR AR 577.30913 L4 008 Disponible ECO030000387
Artículos Biblioteca Electrónica Recursos en línea (RE) ECOSUR Recurso digital ECO400287288097
Artículos Biblioteca San Cristóbal Artículos (AR) ECOSUR AR 577.30913 L4 002 Disponible ECO010003662
Artículos Biblioteca San Cristóbal Artículos Hemeroteca (AR HM) ECOSUR 006 Disponible 280322CB2240
Artículos Biblioteca San Cristóbal Artículos (AR) ECOSUR AR 577.30913 L4/EJ. 2 011 Disponible ECO010018689
Artículos Biblioteca Tapachula Artículos Hemeroteca (AR HM) ECOSUR 010 Disponible 281130CB9514
Artículos Biblioteca Villahermosa Artículos (AR) ECOSUR AR 577.30913 L4 003 Disponible ECO050000208

Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso

Leaf litter decomposition rate and nitrogen, carbon and phosphorous (NCP) concentration of three species: Croton lundellii Standl., Metopium brownei (Jacq.) Urban and Manilkara zapota (L.) van Royen were evaluated in different phases of development (3, 13 and >50 years old) of secondary dry forest in Campeche, Mexico, to test two hypotheses: (1) leaf decomposition rate is higher in older successional stages of secondary dry forest; (2) decomposition rate is more rapid in pioneer species than late successional species, because of differences in substrate quality. The litterbag method was employed to evaluate decomposition. Results indicated that decomposition was related to forest development phase but the strongest influence was due to leaf chemical composition. Decomposition was fastest in C. lundellii, intermediate in M. brownei and slowest in M. zapota. The C/N, C/P ratios and total N and P concentrations were good indicators of decomposition rates across species in all successional stages. In comparing leaf litter collected locally and decomposed in situ, the earlier successional phase showed higher decomposition rates than later stages of succession. Neither N concentration or C/N ratio explained this difference, but it was correlated with higher P concentration. Inglés

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