Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8364885 | Soil Biology and Biochemistry | 2014 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Under the laboratory conditions of our experiments, the influence of soil-litter mixing was minimal and primarily confined to changes in PLFAs during the initial stages of decomposition in the constant soil moisture experiment and the oscillating soil moisture conditions of the rainfall pulse experiment. Soil-litter mixing effects on CO2 production, total phospholipid concentrations, and bacterial to total PLFA ratios were observed within the first week, but responses were fairly weak and varied with litter type and soil moisture treatment. Across the entire 32-week incubation experiment, soil moisture had a significant positive effect on mass loss, but soil-litter mixing did not. The lack of strong soil-litter mixing effects on decomposition under the moderate and relatively constant environmental conditions of this study is in contrast to results from field studies and suggests the importance of soil-litter mixing may be magnified when the fluctuations and extremes in temperature, radiant energy and moisture regimes common dryland field settings are in play.
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Authors
Hanna Lee, Jessica Fitzgerald, Daniel B. Hewins, Rebecca L. McCulley, Steven R. Archer, Thom Rahn, Heather L. Throop,