Arid
DOI10.1016/j.foreco.2016.01.023
Wood decay in desert riverine environments
Andersen, Douglas C.1; Stricker, Craig A.1; Nelson, S. Mark2
通讯作者Andersen, Douglas C.
来源期刊FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
ISSN0378-1127
EISSN1872-7042
出版年2016
卷号365页码:83-95
英文摘要

Floodplain forests and the woody debris they produce are major components of riverine ecosystems in many arid and semiarid regions (drylands). We monitored breakdown and nitrogen dynamics in wood and bark from a native riparian tree, Fremont cottonwood (Populus deltoides subsp. wislizeni), along four North American desert streams. We placed locally-obtained, fresh, coarse material [disks or cylinders (similar to 500-2000 cm(3))] along two cold-desert and two warm-desert rivers in the Colorado River Basin. Material was placed in both floodplain and aquatic environments, and left in situ for up to 12 years. We tested the hypothesis that breakdown would be fastest in relatively warm and moist aerobic environments by comparing the time required for 50% loss of initial ash-free dry matter (T-50) calculated using exponential decay models incorporating a lag term. In cold-desert sites (Green and Yampa rivers, Colorado), disks of wood with bark attached exposed for up to 12 years in locations rarely inundated lost mass at a slower rate (T-50 = 34 yr) than in locations inundated during most spring floods (T-50 = 12 yr). At the latter locations, bark alone loss mass at a rate initially similar to whole disks (T-50 = 13 yr), but which subsequently slowed. In warm-desert sites monitored for 3 years, cylinders of wood with bark removed lost mass very slowly (T-50 = 60 yr) at a location never inundated (Bill Williams River, Arizona), whereas decay rate varied among aquatic locations (T-50 = 20 yr in Bill Williams River; T-50 = 3 yr in Las Vegas Wash, an effluent-dominated stream warmed by treated wastewater inflows). Invertebrates had a minor role in wood breakdown except at in-stream locations in Las Vegas Wash. The presence and form of change in nitrogen content during exposure varied among riverine environments. Our results suggest woody debris breakdown in desert riverine ecosystems is primarily a microbial process with rates determined by landscape position, local weather, and especially the regional climate through its effect on the flow regime. The increased warmth and aridity expected to accompany climate change in the North American southwest will likely retard the already slow wood decay process on naturally functioning desert river floodplains. Our results have implications for designing environmental flows to manage floodplain forest wood budgets, carbon storage, and nutrient cycling along regulated dryland rivers. Published by Elsevier B.V.


英文关键词Decomposition Dryland river Floodplain forest Nitrogen Riparian Woody debris
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000371652300008
WOS关键词DEAD WOOD ; FOREST CONSERVATION ; DECOMPOSITION RATES ; INCISITERMES-MINOR ; NITROGEN DYNAMICS ; RIPARIAN FOREST ; ORGANIC-CARBON ; CHANNEL CHANGE ; DEBRIS ; BREAKDOWN
WOS类目Forestry
WOS研究方向Forestry
来源机构United States Geological Survey
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/192994
作者单位1.US Geol Survey, Ft Collins Sci Ctr, Ft Collins, CO 80526 USA;
2.Bur Reclamat, 86-68220,POB 25007, Denver, CO 80225 USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Andersen, Douglas C.,Stricker, Craig A.,Nelson, S. Mark. Wood decay in desert riverine environments[J]. United States Geological Survey,2016,365:83-95.
APA Andersen, Douglas C.,Stricker, Craig A.,&Nelson, S. Mark.(2016).Wood decay in desert riverine environments.FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT,365,83-95.
MLA Andersen, Douglas C.,et al."Wood decay in desert riverine environments".FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT 365(2016):83-95.
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