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      Intermittent Rivers: A Challenge for Freshwater Ecology

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      BioScience
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          Big data and the future of ecology

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            Implications of Streamflow Variability and Predictability for Lotic Community Structure: A Regional Analysis of Streamflow Patterns

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              Plant litter decomposition in a semi-arid ecosystem controlled by photodegradation.

              The carbon balance in terrestrial ecosystems is determined by the difference between inputs from primary production and the return of carbon to the atmosphere through decomposition of organic matter. Our understanding of the factors that control carbon turnover in water-limited ecosystems is limited, however, as studies of litter decomposition have shown contradictory results and only a modest correlation with precipitation. Here we evaluate the influence of solar radiation, soil biotic activity and soil resource availability on litter decomposition in the semi-arid Patagonian steppe using the results of manipulative experiments carried out under ambient conditions of rainfall and temperature. We show that intercepted solar radiation was the only factor that had a significant effect on the decomposition of organic matter, with attenuation of ultraviolet-B and total radiation causing a 33 and 60 per cent reduction in decomposition, respectively. We conclude that photodegradation is a dominant control on above-ground litter decomposition in this semi-arid ecosystem. Losses through photochemical mineralization may represent a short-circuit in the carbon cycle, with a substantial fraction of carbon fixed in plant biomass being lost directly to the atmosphere without cycling through soil organic matter pools. Furthermore, future changes in radiation interception due to decreased cloudiness, increased stratospheric ozone depletion, or reduced vegetative cover may have a more significant effect on the carbon balance in these water-limited ecosystems than changes in temperature or precipitation.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                BioScience
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                1525-3244
                0006-3568
                March 01 2014
                March 01 2014
                : 64
                : 3
                : 229-235
                Article
                10.1093/biosci/bit027
                81d4afc8-e1c2-48b7-8a3e-451b34c32726
                © 2014
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