Title:
CSPs: Leaf litter quantity and quality in CSPs (2009 - 2012), overview and chemical composition
Access rights:
Private
Usage rights:
No information available
Published:
The data has not yet been used for publications.
Abstract:
Litterfall production is an important linkage between aboveground and belowground. Most studies are carried out in tropical forests or a single forest plantation, few leaf litter data, however, are available for subtropical forests along a chronosequence dominated by few species. We try to get the litterfall data of a complex subtropical forest with different successional stages. We intented to find out how the litter quantity and leaf litter N and C change along a chronosequence in a subtropical forest.
Design:
Litterfall was collected monthly from January 2009 until December 2012. The litter (2010, 2011) was sorted into Castanopsis eyrei, Schima superb, Pinus massoniana, Cyclobalanopsis glauca, Quercus serrata var. brevipetiolata, Lithocarpus glaber. The remaining material was sorted into three groups: evergreen or deciduous species leaves and non-leaf components.
Litter was weighed after being oven dried at 80°C for 24 h to constant weight.
Samples of the 2010 foliar litter were pooled at the community level, and ground into powder using a ball mill (NM200, Retsch, Haan, Germany). Total C and N concentrations at the community level were determined using an elemental analyzer (2400 II CHN elemental analyzer, Perkin-Elmer, USA) with a combustion temperature of 950°C and a reduction temperature of 640°C.
Spatial extent:
The experiment was carried out in Gutianshan National Nature Reserve in the western part of Zhejiang province of China (29°8'18" – 29°17'29" N, 118°2'14" – 118°11'12" E). It has the subtropical monsoon climate with an annual average temperature of 15.1°C and annual average precipitation of 1963.7mm (Geißler,2010).
Around the Gutianshan NRR, deforestation has occurred during different periods in the old days. Most of the stands are secondary forests, evidenced by maximum tree ages of 180 years. Thus, 27 plots called Comparative Study Plots (CSPs) could be established in 2009 with different successional stages. Plots were randomly selected, with a size of 30 x 30 m each. In horizontal projection this corresponded to an average area of 0.074 ha, close to the Chinese areal measure of 1 mu (0.067 ha). Stand ages were defined by the diameter at breast height (dbh) of all trees with > 10 cm dbh and age of the fifth largest tree individual in a plot, based on an allometric regression stem cores taken from 159 trees from 64 different tree species (Bruelheide et al., 2011).In the December of 2008, four litterfall traps were set up in the corners of the centre subplot of each plot, and one in the middle of each plot. A nylon net (1 mm mesh) with a trapping area of 0.75 m × 0.75 m was placed over the PVC frame with a height of 1.5 m.
Temporal extent:
Litterfall was collected monthly from January 2009 to December 2012.
Taxonomic extent:
In total, 148 woody species from 46 families were recorded with at least one individual > 1 m. Maximum richness was 69 woody species per 30 x 30 m plot. A total of 21 species occurred with only one individual in one of the CSPs, and further 14 species (but in some cases multiple individuals) occurred in only one CSP (Bruelheide et al., 2011). We separate the litter of 2010 and 2011, getting the litterfall data of six species: Castanopsis eyrei, Schima superb, Pinus massoniana, Cyclobalanopsis glauca, Quercus serrata var. brevipetiolata, Lithocarpus glaber.
Measurement cirumstances:
In 2010.12 and 2011.7, litter was unable to be collected because of the heavy snow and rain in that month. The missing month litter was accumulated and collected in the next month. We estimated the missing month litter according to the ratio of those two months calculated by other years. The data set is not complete here.
Data analysis:
In each CSP, litterfall production in five litter traps of each month was summed first, and then was divided by the area of the trap to calculate the litterfall mass per unit area.
Filter:
Dataset column
Name:
year
Definition:
year of sampling
Unit:
No information available
Datagroup:
Date time information
Keywords:
date
Values:
2010 |
2011 |
Contributors:
No information available
Dataset column
Name:
month
Definition:
collecting month
Unit:
No information available
Datagroup:
Date time information
Keywords:
date
Values:
Apr |
Contributors:
No information available
Dataset column
Name:
CSP
Definition:
Reasearch plots of the Biodiversity - Ecosystem functioning experiment (BEF-China). There are three main sites for research plots in the BEF Experiment: Comparative Study Plots (CSP) in the Gutianshan Nature Reserve, having a size of 30x30m^2, measured on the ground.
Unit:
No information available
Datagroup:
BEF research plot name
Keywords:
CSP, location
Values:
CSP01 |
CSP04 |
CSP05 |
CSP03 |
CSP02 |
Contributors:
No information available
Dataset column
Name:
litterfall
Definition:
total litterfall
Unit:
g/m2
Datagroup:
Litter Biomass
Keywords:
response variable, biomass, litter
Values:
23.683555555555554 |
10.286222222222223 |
16.718222222222224 |
20.405333333333335 |
22.31822222222222 |
Contributors:
No information available
Dataset column
Name:
total.species.richness
Definition:
the species number of the litter
Unit:
No information available
Datagroup:
Taxonomic biodiversity
Keywords:
response variable, species richness
Values:
12 |
15.4 |
11.8 |
11 |
11.4 |
Contributors:
No information available
Dataset column
Name:
LC
Definition:
Litter total C content
Unit:
%
Datagroup:
Carbon
Keywords:
response variable, carbon
Values:
48.664 |
49.296 |
49.802 |
49.5 |
49.97 |
Contributors:
No information available
Dataset column
Name:
LN
Definition:
Litter total N content
Unit:
%
Datagroup:
Nitrogen
Keywords:
response variable, nitrogen
Values:
0.926 |
0.834 |
0.992 |
0.95 |
0.978 |
Contributors:
No information available
Dataset column
Name:
CN
Definition:
Litter C:N ratio
Unit:
No information available
Datagroup:
Carbon Nitrogen ratio
Keywords:
response variable, C/N ratio
Values:
36.065045626 |
31.22639289 |
29.883233756 |
37.27179878 |
32.160596094 |
Contributors:
No information available
No information available
No information available
No information avialable
Filter:
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Filter:
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Filter:
Shifts in community leaf functional traits are related to litter decomposition along a secondary forest succession series in subtropical China
Abstract:
We investigated shifts in community weighted mean traits (CWM) of 14 leaf functional traits along a secondary successional series in an evergreen broadleaf forest in subtropical southeast China. Most of the investigated traits have been reported t...
Id:
123
Users:
15
Datafiles:
5
Attachments:
0
Board:
Prep
State:
Accepted
Created at:
2014-09-29
Updated at:
2015-01-27
Tree Diversity Enhances Stand Carbon Storage but Not Leaf Area in a Subtropical Forest
Abstract:
Research about biodiversity–productivity relationships has focused on herbaceous ecosystems, with results from tree field studies only recently beginning to emerge. Also, the latter are concentrated largely in the temperate zone. Tree species dive...
Id:
211
Users:
19
Datafiles:
7
Attachments:
0
Board:
Prep
State:
Accepted
Created at:
2017-01-31
Updated at:
2017-01-31
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