Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition.

1. While the importance of wood decay for the global carbon balance is widely recognized, surprisingly little is known about its long-term dynamics and its abiotic and biotic drivers. Progress in this field is hindered by the long time-scales inherent to the low decay rates of wood and the lack of s...

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Published in:Journal of Ecology
Main Authors: Freschet, G.T., Weedon, J.T., Aerts, R., van Hal, J.R., Cornelissen, J.H.C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/e7f51065-1246-43c4-b936-fd6b3a160e37
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01896.x
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spelling ftvuamstcris:oai:research.vu.nl:publications/e7f51065-1246-43c4-b936-fd6b3a160e37 2024-09-30T14:44:32+00:00 Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition. Freschet, G.T. Weedon, J.T. Aerts, R. van Hal, J.R. Cornelissen, J.H.C. 2012 https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/e7f51065-1246-43c4-b936-fd6b3a160e37 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01896.x eng eng https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/e7f51065-1246-43c4-b936-fd6b3a160e37 info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Freschet , G T , Weedon , J T , Aerts , R , van Hal , J R & Cornelissen , J H C 2012 , ' Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition. ' , Journal of Ecology , vol. 100 , pp. 161-170 . https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01896.x article 2012 ftvuamstcris https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01896.x 2024-09-12T00:17:36Z 1. While the importance of wood decay for the global carbon balance is widely recognized, surprisingly little is known about its long-term dynamics and its abiotic and biotic drivers. Progress in this field is hindered by the long time-scales inherent to the low decay rates of wood and the lack of short-term methods to assess long-term decomposition dynamics in standardized field conditions. 2. Here, we present such a method, which relies on the sampling and short-term incubation of wood from several decay stages covering the entire decay process. Together these short-term decay steps are used to model and discriminate between three potential decay dynamics (linear, exponential and sigmoid) using an iterative optimization procedure. We applied this method to analyse long-term wood decay of six subarctic tree species (six stems and two roots) and test the hypotheses that (i) different wood species follow distinct decay dynamics and (ii) interspecific variation in wood traits controls variation in wood decay rates in a standardized environment. 3. We found interspecific variation in long-term wood decay dynamics: decay of Alnus and Salix stems was best described by exponential models, whereas decay of Sorbus stems and Betula and Pinus roots was best fitted by linear models and Betula, Pinus and Populus stems each displayed a sigmoid decay dynamics (up to 5-year initial lag phase). A six-fold variation was observed between the decomposition half-lives of all eight wood types, from 6.8years (6.1-7.5, 95% C.I.) for Alnus stems to 41.3years (34.5-51.8) for Pinus roots. Initial wood traits such as pH (R Article in Journal/Newspaper Subarctic Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU): Research Portal Journal of Ecology 100 1 161 170
institution Open Polar
collection Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU): Research Portal
op_collection_id ftvuamstcris
language English
description 1. While the importance of wood decay for the global carbon balance is widely recognized, surprisingly little is known about its long-term dynamics and its abiotic and biotic drivers. Progress in this field is hindered by the long time-scales inherent to the low decay rates of wood and the lack of short-term methods to assess long-term decomposition dynamics in standardized field conditions. 2. Here, we present such a method, which relies on the sampling and short-term incubation of wood from several decay stages covering the entire decay process. Together these short-term decay steps are used to model and discriminate between three potential decay dynamics (linear, exponential and sigmoid) using an iterative optimization procedure. We applied this method to analyse long-term wood decay of six subarctic tree species (six stems and two roots) and test the hypotheses that (i) different wood species follow distinct decay dynamics and (ii) interspecific variation in wood traits controls variation in wood decay rates in a standardized environment. 3. We found interspecific variation in long-term wood decay dynamics: decay of Alnus and Salix stems was best described by exponential models, whereas decay of Sorbus stems and Betula and Pinus roots was best fitted by linear models and Betula, Pinus and Populus stems each displayed a sigmoid decay dynamics (up to 5-year initial lag phase). A six-fold variation was observed between the decomposition half-lives of all eight wood types, from 6.8years (6.1-7.5, 95% C.I.) for Alnus stems to 41.3years (34.5-51.8) for Pinus roots. Initial wood traits such as pH (R
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Freschet, G.T.
Weedon, J.T.
Aerts, R.
van Hal, J.R.
Cornelissen, J.H.C.
spellingShingle Freschet, G.T.
Weedon, J.T.
Aerts, R.
van Hal, J.R.
Cornelissen, J.H.C.
Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition.
author_facet Freschet, G.T.
Weedon, J.T.
Aerts, R.
van Hal, J.R.
Cornelissen, J.H.C.
author_sort Freschet, G.T.
title Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition.
title_short Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition.
title_full Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition.
title_fullStr Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition.
title_full_unstemmed Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition.
title_sort interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition.
publishDate 2012
url https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/e7f51065-1246-43c4-b936-fd6b3a160e37
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01896.x
genre Subarctic
genre_facet Subarctic
op_source Freschet , G T , Weedon , J T , Aerts , R , van Hal , J R & Cornelissen , J H C 2012 , ' Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short-term method to study long-term wood decomposition. ' , Journal of Ecology , vol. 100 , pp. 161-170 . https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01896.x
op_relation https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/e7f51065-1246-43c4-b936-fd6b3a160e37
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01896.x
container_title Journal of Ecology
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