Rates of litterfall and organic matter turnover at three South Australian indigenous forest sites |
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Authors: | BARRY R. HUTSON |
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Abstract: | A quantitative study of the litterfall rate, litter mass and the organic carbon content of litter and soil at three South Australian low open-forests was made monthly for 2 years. The soil and dominant vegetation at the sites were similar, but the mean annual rainfall differed; 635, 690 and 1050 mm respectively at the ‘dry’, ‘medium’ and ‘wet’ sites. Mean annual litterfall at the dry, medium and wet sites was 114, 205 and 233 g m?2 respectively, and the mean mass of the litter layer was 885, 1153 and 858 g m?2 Leafy material formed 82% of the litterfall at each site and maximum fall occurred in the summer. Leafy material formed 64–68% of the three litter layers and there was no general pattern of seasonal change of mass. The data obtained were used to calculate the half-life (T1/2 of the litter, the values were 5.4, 3.9 and 2.6 years respectively at the dry, medium and wet sites. The values from the medium and wet sites fit within the range previously recorded for other open-forests and low open-forests, but indicate an extremely slow rate of decomposition at the dry site, which was located close to open-scrubland. The amounts of organic carbon in the 0–8 cm layer of soil at the dry, medium and wet sites were 777, 928and 950 g m-2 respectively. However, without a detailed investigation of the source of soil carbon, these values could only be used to show that the organic carbon store to a depth of 8 cm is equivalent to 9–15 times the annual litterfall input. |
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