Abstract

Litter fall consists of all organic material deposited on the forest floor, being of extremely important for the structure and maintenance of the ecosystem through nutrient cycling. This study aimed to evaluate the production and decomposition of litter fall in a secondary Atlantic forest fragment of secondary Atlantic Forest, at the Guarapiranga Ecological Park, in São Paulo, SP. The litter samples were taken monthly from May 2012 to May 2013. To assess the contribution of litter fall forty collectors were installed randomly within an area of 0.5 ha. The collected material was sent to the laboratory to be dried at 65 °C for 72 hours, being subsequently separated into fractions of leaves, twigs, reproductive parts and miscellaneous, and weighed to obtain the dry biomass. Litterbags were placed and tied close to the collectors to estimate the decomposition rate in order to evaluate the loss of dry biomass at 30, 60, 90, 120 and 150 days. After collection, the material was sent to the laboratory to be dried and weighed again. Total litter fall throughout the year reached 5.7 Mg.ha-1.yr-1 and the major amount of the material was collected from September till March. Leaves had the major contribution for total litter fall (72%), followed by twigs (14%), reproductive parts (11%) and miscellaneous (3%). Reproductive parts had a peak during the wet season. Positive correlation was observed between total litter and precipitation, temperature and radiation (r = 0.66, p<0.05; r = 0.76, p<0.05; r = 0.58, p<0.05, respectively). The multiple regression showed that precipitation and radiation contributed significantly to litter fall production. Decomposition rate was in the interval expected for secondary tropical forest and was correlated to rainfall. It was concluded that this fragment of secondary forest showed a seasonality effect driven mainly by precipitation and radiation, both important components of foliage renewal for the plant community and that decomposition was in an intermediate rate.

Highlights

  • The Atlantic Forest is one of the richest ecosystems in biodiversity worldwide and it is considered a hot spot

  • The present study aimed to evaluate the production and decomposition of litter fall at the Guarapiranga Ecological Park, a secondary Atlantic Forest fragment, located in São Paulo, SP

  • The annual value of litter production found in this study is expected for secondary tropical forests and is in accordance with other authors (TOLEDO; PEREIRA, 2004; FERNANDES et al, 2006; VIDAL et al, 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

The Atlantic Forest is one of the richest ecosystems in biodiversity worldwide and it is considered a hot spot. This forest extends along the Brazilian coast and suffers from a continuing devastation due to anthropogenic factors such as logging and agriculture (SOS ATLANTIC, 2013). Another important reason in this devastation is the land use change for residential purposes and tourism, functioning as an escape valve to shelter the surplus population. According to Yong (2005) the Atlantic Forest houses two-thirds of the Brazilian population. The transformation of vast areas of primary forests causes increase areas of secondary forests, which should be monitored in the context of conservation and public policy

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