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Evolutionary Position and Leaf Toughness Control Chemical Transformation of Litter, and Drought Reinforces This Control: Evidence from a Common Garden Experiment across 48 Species

Plant leaf litter is an important source of soil chemicals that are essential for the ecosystem and changes in leaf litter chemical traits during decomposition will determine the availability of multiple chemical elements recycling in the ecosystem. However, it is unclear whether the changes in litt...

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Autores principales: Pan, Xu, Song, Yao-Bin, Jiang, Can, Liu, Guo-Fang, Ye, Xue-Hua, Xie, Xiu-Fang, Hu, Yu-Kun, Zhao, Wei-Wei, Cui, Lijuan, Cornelissen, Johannes H. C., Dong, Ming, Prinzing, Andreas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4648592/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26575641
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143140
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author Pan, Xu
Song, Yao-Bin
Jiang, Can
Liu, Guo-Fang
Ye, Xue-Hua
Xie, Xiu-Fang
Hu, Yu-Kun
Zhao, Wei-Wei
Cui, Lijuan
Cornelissen, Johannes H. C.
Dong, Ming
Prinzing, Andreas
author_facet Pan, Xu
Song, Yao-Bin
Jiang, Can
Liu, Guo-Fang
Ye, Xue-Hua
Xie, Xiu-Fang
Hu, Yu-Kun
Zhao, Wei-Wei
Cui, Lijuan
Cornelissen, Johannes H. C.
Dong, Ming
Prinzing, Andreas
author_sort Pan, Xu
collection PubMed
description Plant leaf litter is an important source of soil chemicals that are essential for the ecosystem and changes in leaf litter chemical traits during decomposition will determine the availability of multiple chemical elements recycling in the ecosystem. However, it is unclear whether the changes in litter chemical traits during decomposition and their similarities across species can be predicted, respectively, using other leaf traits or using the phylogenetic relatedness of the litter species. Here we examined the fragmentation levels, mass losses, and the changes of 10 litter chemical traits during 1-yr decomposition under different environmental conditions (within/above surrounding litter layer) for 48 temperate tree species and related them to an important leaf functional trait, i.e. leaf toughness. Leaf toughness could predict the changes well in terms of amounts, but poorly in terms of concentrations. Changes of 7 out of 10 litter chemical traits during decomposition showed a significant phylogenetic signal notably when litter was exposed above surrounding litter. These phylogenetic signals in element dynamics were stronger than those of initial elementary composition. Overall, relatively hard-to-measure ecosystem processes like element dynamics during decomposition could be partly predicted simply from phylogenies and leaf toughness measures. We suggest that the strong phylogenetic signals in chemical ecosystem functioning of species may reflect the concerted control by multiple moderately conserved traits, notably if interacting biota suffer microclimatic stress and spatial isolation from ambient litter.
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spelling pubmed-46485922015-11-25 Evolutionary Position and Leaf Toughness Control Chemical Transformation of Litter, and Drought Reinforces This Control: Evidence from a Common Garden Experiment across 48 Species Pan, Xu Song, Yao-Bin Jiang, Can Liu, Guo-Fang Ye, Xue-Hua Xie, Xiu-Fang Hu, Yu-Kun Zhao, Wei-Wei Cui, Lijuan Cornelissen, Johannes H. C. Dong, Ming Prinzing, Andreas PLoS One Research Article Plant leaf litter is an important source of soil chemicals that are essential for the ecosystem and changes in leaf litter chemical traits during decomposition will determine the availability of multiple chemical elements recycling in the ecosystem. However, it is unclear whether the changes in litter chemical traits during decomposition and their similarities across species can be predicted, respectively, using other leaf traits or using the phylogenetic relatedness of the litter species. Here we examined the fragmentation levels, mass losses, and the changes of 10 litter chemical traits during 1-yr decomposition under different environmental conditions (within/above surrounding litter layer) for 48 temperate tree species and related them to an important leaf functional trait, i.e. leaf toughness. Leaf toughness could predict the changes well in terms of amounts, but poorly in terms of concentrations. Changes of 7 out of 10 litter chemical traits during decomposition showed a significant phylogenetic signal notably when litter was exposed above surrounding litter. These phylogenetic signals in element dynamics were stronger than those of initial elementary composition. Overall, relatively hard-to-measure ecosystem processes like element dynamics during decomposition could be partly predicted simply from phylogenies and leaf toughness measures. We suggest that the strong phylogenetic signals in chemical ecosystem functioning of species may reflect the concerted control by multiple moderately conserved traits, notably if interacting biota suffer microclimatic stress and spatial isolation from ambient litter. Public Library of Science 2015-11-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4648592/ /pubmed/26575641 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143140 Text en © 2015 Pan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pan, Xu
Song, Yao-Bin
Jiang, Can
Liu, Guo-Fang
Ye, Xue-Hua
Xie, Xiu-Fang
Hu, Yu-Kun
Zhao, Wei-Wei
Cui, Lijuan
Cornelissen, Johannes H. C.
Dong, Ming
Prinzing, Andreas
Evolutionary Position and Leaf Toughness Control Chemical Transformation of Litter, and Drought Reinforces This Control: Evidence from a Common Garden Experiment across 48 Species
title Evolutionary Position and Leaf Toughness Control Chemical Transformation of Litter, and Drought Reinforces This Control: Evidence from a Common Garden Experiment across 48 Species
title_full Evolutionary Position and Leaf Toughness Control Chemical Transformation of Litter, and Drought Reinforces This Control: Evidence from a Common Garden Experiment across 48 Species
title_fullStr Evolutionary Position and Leaf Toughness Control Chemical Transformation of Litter, and Drought Reinforces This Control: Evidence from a Common Garden Experiment across 48 Species
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary Position and Leaf Toughness Control Chemical Transformation of Litter, and Drought Reinforces This Control: Evidence from a Common Garden Experiment across 48 Species
title_short Evolutionary Position and Leaf Toughness Control Chemical Transformation of Litter, and Drought Reinforces This Control: Evidence from a Common Garden Experiment across 48 Species
title_sort evolutionary position and leaf toughness control chemical transformation of litter, and drought reinforces this control: evidence from a common garden experiment across 48 species
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4648592/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26575641
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143140
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