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Accurate forest projections require long-term wood decay experiments because plant trait effects change through time. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the rate of deadwood decomposition affects forests' role as carbon sinks or sources over time, emphasizing the need for long-term experiments to understand these dynamics.
  • It was found that the impact of tree traits on decay rates diminishes as decomposition progresses, with wood density and vessel diameter being crucial factors influencing mass loss during different decay stages.
  • The research highlights that accurate predictions about forest ecosystems and their carbon contributions can only be achieved through extended studies that account for the changing effects of wood traits over time.

Article Abstract

Whether global change will drive changing forests from net carbon (C) sinks to sources relates to how quickly deadwood decomposes. Because complete wood mineralization takes years, most experiments focus on how traits, environments and decomposer communities interact as wood decay begins. Few experiments last long enough to test whether drivers change with decay rates through time, with unknown consequences for scaling short-term results up to long-term forest ecosystem projections. Using a 7 year experiment that captured complete mineralization among 21 temperate tree species, we demonstrate that trait effects fade with advancing decay. However, wood density and vessel diameter, which may influence permeability, control how decay rates change through time. Denser wood loses mass more slowly at first but more quickly with advancing decay, which resolves ambiguity about the after-life consequences of this key plant functional trait by demonstrating that its effect on decay depends on experiment duration and sampling frequency. Only long-term data and a time-varying model yielded accurate predictions of both mass loss in a concurrent experiment and naturally recruited deadwood structure in a 32-year-old forest plot. Given the importance of forests in the carbon cycle, and the pivotal role for wood decay, accurate ecosystem projections are critical and they require experiments that go beyond enumerating potential mechanisms by identifying the temporal scale for their effects.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14873DOI Listing

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