Synergistic effects: a common theme in mixed‐species litter decomposition

Jun Liu(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Xiaoyu Liu(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Qingni Song(Jiangxi Agricultural University), Zacchaeus G. Compson, Carri J. LeRoy(The Evergreen State College), Fenggang Luan(Jiangxi Agricultural University), Hui Wang(Shandong Agricultural University), Ya‐Lin Hu(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Qingpei Yang(Jiangxi Agricultural University)
New Phytologist
March 26, 2020
Cited by 141

Abstract

Litter decomposition plays a key role in nutrient cycling across ecosystems, yet to date, we lack a comprehensive understanding of the nonadditive decomposition effects in leaf litter mixing experiments. To fill that gap, we compiled 69 individual studies with the aim to perform two meta-analyses on nonadditive effects. We show that a significant synergistic effect (faster decomposition in mixtures than expected) occurs at a global scale, with an average increase of 3-5% in litter mixtures. In particular, low-quality litter in mixtures shows a significant synergistic effect, while additive effects are observed for high-quality species. Additionally, synergistic effects turn into antagonistic effects when soil fauna are absent or litter is in very late stages of decomposition (near-humus). In contrast to temperate and tropical areas, studies in boreal regions show significant antagonistic effects. Our two meta-analyses provide a systematic evaluation of nonadditive effects in mixed litter decomposition studies and show that litter quality alters the effects of litter mixing. Our results indicate that nutrient transfer, soil fauna and inhibitory secondary compounds can influence mixing effects. We also highlight that synergistic and antagonistic effects occur concurrently, and the final litter mixing effect results from the interplay between them.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis