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Title: Necromass production: studies in undisturbed and logged Amazon forests.
Authors: Palace, Michael
Keller, Michael
Silva, Hudson
USDA, FS
Source: Ecological applications: a publication of the Ecological Society of America. 2008 June, v. 18, issue 4, p. 873-884.
NALT Subjects: tropical forests
forest litter
branches
leaves
biodegradation
soil microorganisms
mineralization
logging
carbon
biogeochemical cycles
coarse woody debris
Brazil
Other Subjects: standing dead trees
Issue Date: Jun-2008
Abstract: Necromass stocks account for up to 20% of carbon stored in tropical forests and have been estimated to be 14-19% of the annual aboveground carbon flux. Both stocks and fluxes of necromass are infrequently measured. In this study, we directly measured the production of fallen coarse necromass (>=2 cm diameter) during 4.5 years using repeated surveys in undisturbed forest areas and in forests subjected to reduced-impact logging at the Tapajos National Forest, Belterra, Brazil (3.08° S, 54.94° W). We also measured fallen coarse necromass and standing dead stocks at two times during our study. The mean (SE) annual flux into the fallen coarse necromass pool in undisturbed forest of 6.7 (0.8) Mgxha-1·yr-1 was not significantly different from the flux under a reduced-impact logging of 8.5 (1.3) Mgxha-1·yr-1. With the assumption of steady state, the instantaneous decomposition constants for fallen necromass in undisturbed forests were 0.12 yr-1 for large, 0.33 yr-1 for medium, and 0.47 yr-1 for small size classes. The mass weighted decomposition constant was 0.15 yr-1 for all fallen coarse necromass. Standing dead wood had a residence time of 4.2 years, and 0.9 Mgxha-1·yr-1 of this pool was respired annually to the atmosphere through decomposition. Coarse necromass decomposition at our study site accounted for 12% of total carbon re-mineralization, and total aboveground coarse necromass was 14% of the aboveground biomass. Use of mortality rates to calculate production of coarse necromass leads to an underestimation of coarse necromass production by 45%, suggesting that nonlethal disturbance such as branch fall contributes significantly to this flux. Coarse necromass production is an important component of the tropical forest carbon cycle that has been neglected in most previous studies or erroneously estimated.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/20097
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

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