Journal article
Global climate change and litter decomposition: More frequent fire slows decomposition and increases the functional importance of invertebrates
KEC Brennan, FJ Christie, A York
Global Change Biology | WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC | Published : 2009
Abstract
Of the many mechanisms by which global climate change may alter ecosystem processes perhaps the least known and insidious is altered disturbance regimes. We used a field-based experiment to examine the climate change scenario of more frequent fires with altered invertebrate assemblages on the decomposition of Eucalyptus leaves. Our design comprised three fire regimes [long-term fire exclusion (FE), long-term frequent burning (FB) and FE altered to FB (FEFB)] and two litter bag mesh sizes (8.0 and 0.2 mm) that either permitted or denied access to the leaf litter by most invertebrates. We found a significant interaction effect between fire regime and mesh size in losses of litter mass and net ..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We thank the Bushfire CRC for funding, NSW Forests for maintaining the study sites and Amanda Ashton, Tina Bell, Kristen Byford, Josie Lawrence and Melinda Moir for field/lab assistance. Constructive comments by Melinda Moir and two anonymous reviewers improved the manuscript.