Abstract
Plant litter is an important carbon (C) and nutrient pool in terrestrial ecosystems. The C components in plant litter are important because they regulate plant litter decomposition rate, but little is known on the global patterns and determinants of their concentrations in freshly fallen plant litter. Here, we quantified the concentrations of leaf litter C components (i.e., carbohydrate, polyphenol, tannin, and condensed tannin) with 864 measurements from 161 independent publications. We found that (1) the mean concentrations of leaf litter carbohydrate, polyphenol, tannin and condensed tannin were 27.7, 6.08, 8.84 and 5.7 %, respectively; (2) the concentrations of leaf litter C components were affected by taxonomic division, mycorrhizal association, life form, and/or leaf shedding strategy; (3) soil property had similar impacts on the concentrations of the four C compounds, while the influence of mean annual temperature and precipitation varied; and (4) elevation had opposing effects on carbohydrate and polyphenol concentrations, but not on that of tannin and condensed tannin, and only carbohydrate concentration was strongly affected by absolute latitude. In general, our results clearly show the global patterns and drivers of the concentrations of litter C compounds, providing new insights into the role of litter decomposition in global C dynamics.
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