Abstract
For the purposes of forest restoration, carbon (C) fixation, and economic improvement, eucalyptus (Eucalyptus urophylla) has been widely planted in South China. The understory of eucalyptus plantations is often occupied by a dense community of the fern Dicranopteris dichotoma, which intercepts tree canopy leaf litter before it reaches the ground. To understand the effects of this interception of litterfall on C cycling in eucalyptus plantations, we quantified the mass of intercepted litter and the influences of litterfall interception on litter decomposition and soil respiration. The total mass of E. urophylla litterfall collected on the understory was similar to that collected by the traditional litter trap method. All of the eucalyptus litterfall is intercepted by the D. dichotoma canopy. Of the litterfall that was intercepted by D. dichotoma, 20–40% and 60–80% was intercepted by the top (50–100 cm) and bottom (0–50 cm) of the understory canopy, respectively. Intercepted litterfall decomposed faster at the bottom of understory canopy (at the base of the plants) than at the top, and decomposition was slower on the soil surface in the absence of understory than on any location in the understory canopy. Soil respiration was highest when both the understory and litter were present and was lowest when both the understory and litter were absent. These results indicate that litterfall interception changed carbon flow between aboveground and belowground through litter decomposition and soil respiration, which changed carbon cycling in eucalyptus plantations. The effects of the understory on litter decomposition and soil respiration should be considered in ecosystem carbon models.
Highlights
Forests play an important role in terrestrial carbon (C) cycling [1,2,3]
Litter decomposition The litter mass remaining in all treatments followed a typical litter decomposition pattern and was always greater for litter bags kept in the D. dichotoma canopy than on the surface of the soil in an area without understory (Fig. 3A)
The aboveground biomass of D. dichotoma ranges from 1360 to 3411 kg ha21, and the understory canopy cover can be as high as 100% [26]
Summary
The forest C stock in China had decreased by 0.62 Pg by the 1970s [4]. China has more artificial plantations than any other country [7]. Artificial plantations occupy 3379 ha and represent 32% of the forested area in China. In Guangdong Province in South China, for example, the forest cover increased from 26% in 1979 to 50% in 1998 because of artificial vegetation restoration. These plantations are considered to be important C pools that may influence climate change at the regional scale [8]
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