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Nutrient Cycling in Forest Ecosystems



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Autore: Qualls Robert G Visualizza persona
Titolo: Nutrient Cycling in Forest Ecosystems Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Basel, Switzerland, : MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2020
Descrizione fisica: 1 electronic resource (218 p.)
Soggetto topico: Research & information: general
Biology, life sciences
Forestry & related industries
Soggetto non controllato: leaf stoichiometry
Cyclocarya paliurus
geographic variations
natural populations
climate variables
nitrogen
phosphorus
N:P ratio
soil stoichiometry
soil nutrient
nutrient limitations
natural grassland
natural forest
soil fauna
N addition
soil profile
community structure
food resources
poplar plantations
experimental nitrogen addition
understory plant growth
plant nutrient
nonstructural carbohydrates
Alpine treeline
Nitrogen
Non-structural carbohydrates
Phosphorus
Potassium
Remobilization
Storage
Upper limits
nutrient resorption
nitrogen and phosphorous
planted forests
climate zones
plant functional types
precipitation
green leaf nutrient
nitrogen deposition
N and P colimitation
leaf N:P stoichiometry
soil N:P stoichiometry
seasonal variations
nutrition resorption
ecological stoichiometry
plant-soil feedback
stand age
Robinia pseudoacacia L.
forests
nutrients
disturbance
management
diversity
biomass
soil properties
experimental fires
UV-spectroscopy analysis
thermal infrared thermometer
nitrogen and phosphorus addition
understory plants
stoichiometric ratio
litter decomposition
litter standing crop carbon
conversion coefficient
climatic factors
Tibetan Plateau
shrublands
Cunninghamia lanceolata
mixture effect
nutrient cycling
rhizosphere effect
species competition
Persona (resp. second.): QuallsRobert G
Sommario/riassunto: The long-term productivity of forest ecosystems depends on the cycling of nutrients. The effect of carbon dioxide fertilization on forest productivity may ultimately be limited by the rate of nutrient cycling. Contemporary and future disturbances such as climatic warming, N-deposition, deforestation, short rotation sylviculture, fire (both wild and controlled), and the invasion of exotic species all place strains on the integrity of ecosystem nutrient cycling. Global differences in climate, soils, and species make it difficult to extrapolate even a single important study worldwide. Despite advances in the understanding of nutrient cycling and carbon production in forests, many questions remain. The chapters in this volume reflect many contemporary research priorities. The thirteen studies in this volume are arranged in the following subject groups: • N and P resorption from foliage worldwide, along chronosequences and along elevation gradients; • Litter production and decomposition; • N and P stoichiometry as affected by N deposition, geographic gradients, species changes, and ecosystem restoration; • Effects of N and P addition on understory biomass, litter, and soil; • Effects of burning on soil nutrients; • Effects of N addition on soil fauna.
Titolo autorizzato: Nutrient Cycling in Forest Ecosystems  Visualizza cluster
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910557498503321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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