Precipitation and diameter affect wood decomposition both directly and indirectly via deadwood traits and position

  • Wanying Yu
  • , Congwen Wang
  • , Johannes H.C. Cornelissen
  • , Xuehua Ye
  • , Xuejun Yang
  • , Qingguo Cui
  • , Zhenying Huang*
  • , Deli Wang
  • , Guofang Liu*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Woody plants are important components of dryland ecosystems. Our understanding of wood decomposition in drylands, an important component of biogeochemical cycling, is poor compared to that in mesic ecosystems. To uncovering the complex interactive effects of the different key drivers, we studied the effects of precipitation, position (aboveground and belowground), wood size and litter quality of plant species (four to five local species and one widespread woody species) on woody litter decomposition rates along a precipitation gradient from 37 to 369 mm, spanning five dryland sites. Wood dry matter content (DMC) was a critical negative predictor of wood decomposition in water-limited ecosystems. Thicker woody litter had lower decomposition rates (k values) directly because of smaller relative surface exposure, and indirectly through higher wood DMC or lower bark mass ratio (bark mass divided by wood mass for a given branch length). Mean annual precipitation (MAP) increased the k values both directly, and indirectly by decreasing the wood DMC and increasing the bark mass ratio due to species turnover. The k values of buried woody litter were mostly two to three times higher than litter on the soil surface, but not different at the extremely arid site. A steeper slope of the relationship between overall woody litter quality (particularly wood DMC) or annual precipitation and k values was observed belowground than aboveground, as related to the higher moisture belowground than aboveground. These findings highlight the complex interactions among climate (precipitation), litter position, size and quality on wood decomposition in drylands, thereby helping to improve our mechanistic understanding of dryland woody litter decomposition. We conclude that wood decomposition at the regional and local scales will influence biogeochemical cycling in drylands under future climate change through both direct effects of moisture and indirect effects of litter quality characteristics.

Original languageEnglish
Article number109604
Pages (from-to)1-11
Number of pages11
JournalSoil Biology and Biochemistry
Volume199
Early online date25 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors

Funding

We thank S. Guo from Minqin Station, B. Wang from Shapotou Station, and H. Xi and T. Yu from the Chinese Academy of Sciences for their assistance with field sampling. This study was funded by the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (grant number XDA26010101). We are grateful to the anonymous reviewers for their highly relevant comments regarding this manuscript.

FundersFunder number
Chinese Academy of SciencesXDA26010101

    Keywords

    • Dryland
    • Litter position
    • Precipitation
    • Wood litter decomposition
    • Wood litter quality
    • Wood size

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