González Grizelle, Gould William A, Hudak Andrew T, Hollingsworth Teresa Nettleton
USDA Forest Service, International Institute of Tropical Forestry, Río Piedras, Puerto Rico 00926-1115, USA.
Ambio. 2008 Dec;37(7-8):588-97. doi: 10.1579/0044-7447-37.7.588.
In this study, we set up a wood decomposition experiment to i) quantify the percent of mass remaining, decay constant and performance strength of aspen stakes (Populus tremuloides) in dry and moist boreal (Alaska and Minnesota, USA), temperate (Washington and Idaho, USA), and tropical (Puerto Rico) forest types, and ii) determine the effects of fragmentation on wood decomposition rates as related to fragment size, forest age (and/or structure) and climate at the macro- and meso-scales. Fragment sizes represented the landscape variability within a climatic region. Overall, the mean small fragments area ranged from 10-14 ha, medium-sized fragments 33 to 60 ha, and large fragments 100-240 ha. We found that: i) aspen stakes decayed fastest in the tropical sites, and the slowest in the temperate forest fragments, ii) the percent of mass remaining was significantly greater in dry than in moist forests in boreal and temperate fragments, while the opposite was true for the tropical forest fragments, iii) no effect of fragment size on the percent of mass remaining of aspen stakes in the boreal sites, temperate dry, and tropical moist forests, and iv) no significant differences of aspen wood decay between forest edges and interior forest in boreal, temperate and tropical fragments. We conclude that: i) moisture condition is an important control over wood decomposition over broad climate gradients; and that such relationship can be non linear, and ii) the presence of a particular group of organism (termites) can significantly alter the decay rates of wood more than what might be predicted based on climatic factors alone. Biotic controls on wood decay might be more important predictors of wood decay in tropical regions, while abiotic constraints seems to be important determinants of decay in cold forested fragments.
在本研究中,我们开展了一项木材分解实验,以:i)量化美国阿拉斯加和明尼苏达州的干燥及湿润北方森林、美国华盛顿州和爱达荷州的温带森林以及波多黎各的热带森林中,颤杨木桩(Populus tremuloides)的剩余质量百分比、腐烂常数和性能强度;ii)在宏观和中观尺度上,确定破碎对木材分解速率的影响,这些影响与碎片大小、森林年龄(和/或结构)及气候相关。碎片大小代表了一个气候区域内的景观变异性。总体而言,平均小碎片面积范围为10 - 14公顷,中等大小碎片为33至60公顷,大碎片为100 - 240公顷。我们发现:i)颤杨木桩在热带地区腐烂最快,在温带森林碎片中最慢;ii)在北方和温带碎片中,干燥森林中剩余质量的百分比显著高于湿润森林,而在热带森林碎片中情况则相反;iii)在北方地区、温带干燥森林和热带湿润森林中,碎片大小对颤杨木桩剩余质量百分比没有影响;iv)在北方、温带和热带碎片中,森林边缘和森林内部的颤杨木材腐烂没有显著差异。我们得出结论:i)湿度条件是广泛气候梯度上木材分解的重要控制因素;且这种关系可能是非线性的;ii)特定生物群体(白蚁)的存在对木材腐烂速率的改变可能比仅基于气候因素预测的要大得多。生物对木材腐烂的控制可能是热带地区木材腐烂更重要的预测指标,而在寒冷森林碎片中,非生物限制似乎是腐烂的重要决定因素。