Department of Biology, Center for Reservoir and Aquatic Systems Research, Baylor University, Waco, Texas, USA.
Lacawac Sanctuary Biological Field Station and Environmental Education Center, Lake Ariel, Pennsylvania, USA.
Ecology. 2023 Aug;104(8):e4114. doi: 10.1002/ecy.4114. Epub 2023 Jun 15.
Decomposition of coarse detritus (e.g., dead organic matter larger than ~1 mm such as leaf litter or animal carcasses) in freshwater ecosystems is well described in terms of mass loss, particularly as rates that compress mass loss into one number (e.g., a first-order decay coefficient, or breakdown rate, "k"); less described are temporal changes in the elemental composition of these materials during decomposition, with important implications for elemental cycling from microbes to ecosystems. This stands in contrast with work in the terrestrial realm, where a focus on detrital elemental cycling has provided a sharper mechanistic understanding of decomposition, especially with specific processes such as immobilization and mineralization. Notably, freshwater ecologists often measure carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P), and their stoichiometric ratios in decomposing coarse materials, including carcasses, wood, leaf litter, and more, but these measurements remain piecemeal. These detrital nutrients are measurements of the entire detrital-microbial complex and are integrative of numerous processes, especially nutrient immobilization and mineralization, and associated microbial growth and death. Thus, data relevant to an elemental, mechanistically focused decomposition ecology are available in freshwaters, but have not been fully applied to that purpose. We synthesized published detrital nutrient and stoichiometry measurements at a global scale, yielding 4038 observations comprising 810 decomposition time series (i.e., measurements within a defined cohort of decomposing material through time) to build a basis for understanding the temporality of elemental content in freshwater detritus. Specifically, the dataset focuses on temporally and ontogenetically (mass loss) explicit measurements of N, P, and stoichiometry (C:N, C:P, N:P). We also collected ancillary data, including detrital characteristics (e.g., species, lignin content), water physiochemistry, geographic location, incubation system type, and methodological variables (e.g., bag mesh size). These measurements are important to unlocking mechanistic insights into detrital ontogeny (the temporal trajectory of decomposing materials) that can provide a deeper understanding of heterotroph-driven C and nutrient cycling in freshwaters. Moreover, these data can help to bridge aquatic and terrestrial decomposition ecology, across plant or animal origin. By focusing on temporal trajectories of elements, this dataset facilitates cross-ecosystem comparisons of fundamental decomposition controls on elemental fluxes. It provides a strong starting point (e.g., via modeling efforts) for comparing processes such as immobilization and mineralization that are understudied in freshwaters. Time series from decomposing leaf litter, particularly in streams, are common in the dataset, but we also synthesized ontogenies of animal-based detritus, which tend to decompose rapidly compared with plant-based detritus that contains high concentrations of structural compounds such as lignin and cellulose. Although animal-based data were rare, comprising only three time series, their inclusion in this dataset underscores the opportunities to develop an understanding of decomposition that encompasses all detrital types, from carrion to leaf litter. There are no copyright or proprietary restrictions on the dataset; please cite this data paper when reusing these materials.
在淡水生态系统中,粗碎屑(例如,大于~1mm 的死有机物质,如落叶或动物尸体)的分解很好地描述为质量损失,特别是当将质量损失压缩为一个数字(例如,一阶衰减系数或分解率“k”)时;在这些物质分解过程中,元素组成的时间变化描述较少,这对从微生物到生态系统的元素循环有重要影响。这与陆地领域的工作形成鲜明对比,在陆地领域,对碎屑元素循环的关注为分解提供了更具机制性的理解,特别是对于特定过程,如固定和矿化。值得注意的是,淡水生态学家经常测量分解粗物质(包括尸体、木材、落叶等)中的碳 (C)、氮 (N) 和磷 (P) 及其化学计量比,但这些测量仍然是零散的。这些碎屑养分是整个碎屑微生物复合体的测量值,是许多过程的综合,特别是养分固定和矿化以及相关的微生物生长和死亡。因此,与元素有关的、以机制为重点的分解生态学的数据在淡水中可用,但尚未充分应用于该目的。我们在全球范围内综合了已发表的碎屑养分和化学计量测量值,得出了 4038 个观测值,其中包括 810 个分解时间序列(即在定义的分解物质队列中随时间进行的测量),为了解淡水碎屑中元素含量的时间性奠定了基础。具体来说,该数据集侧重于氮、磷和化学计量(C:N、C:P、N:P)的时间和个体发育(质量损失)明确测量值。我们还收集了辅助数据,包括碎屑特征(例如,物种、木质素含量)、水物理化学性质、地理位置、孵育系统类型和方法变量(例如,袋子网眼尺寸)。这些测量值对于揭示碎屑个体发育(分解物质的时间轨迹)的机制性见解很重要,这可以更深入地了解淡水异养驱动的 C 和养分循环。此外,这些数据可以帮助弥合水生和陆地分解生态学之间的差距,涵盖植物或动物起源。通过关注元素的时间轨迹,该数据集促进了对基本分解控制对元素通量的跨生态系统比较。它为比较固定和矿化等过程提供了一个良好的起点(例如,通过建模工作),这些过程在淡水中研究较少。来自分解落叶的时间序列,特别是在溪流中,在该数据集中很常见,但我们还综合了基于动物的碎屑的个体发育,与含有高浓度结构化合物(如木质素和纤维素)的植物基碎屑相比,动物基碎屑通常会快速分解。尽管动物源数据很少,只有三个时间序列,但将它们包含在这个数据集中强调了开发涵盖所有碎屑类型(从腐肉到落叶)的分解理解的机会。该数据集没有版权或专有限制;在重新使用这些材料时,请引用本数据论文。