Rainfall distribution variability controls surface but not belowground litter decomposition in a semi-arid shrubland

IntroductionRainfall patterns are expected to become increasingly erratic as a result of global climate change, with more intense but less frequent rainfall events leading to an increased occurrence of drought events. This process may lead to significant declines in vegetation cover and subsequent i...

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Main Authors: Yulin Li, Li Cheng, Honglin Yang, Rui Zhang, Zhiying Ning
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpls.2025.1455170/full
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author Yulin Li
Li Cheng
Honglin Yang
Rui Zhang
Zhiying Ning
author_facet Yulin Li
Li Cheng
Honglin Yang
Rui Zhang
Zhiying Ning
author_sort Yulin Li
collection DOAJ
description IntroductionRainfall patterns are expected to become increasingly erratic as a result of global climate change, with more intense but less frequent rainfall events leading to an increased occurrence of drought events. This process may lead to significant declines in vegetation cover and subsequent increases in soil erosion, consequently accelerating the bury of detached litter by soil deposition and the mixture of residues from different plant species. Responses of litter decomposition to increasing rainfall variability in distribution and subsequent litter mixing or soil cover have scarcely received attention.MethodsTo fill this gap in our knowledge, we analyzed the influence of rainfall variability, soil cover, and litter mixing on shrub-species litter decomposition in a semi-arid shrubland. We explored the effects of redistributing the frequency and amount of precipitation on surface and belowground decomposition of litter from two separate or mixed predominant shrubs.ResultsDecomposition of belowground litter was consistently higher than that of surface litter over the entire field-incubation process. Mass loss significantly decreased in surface litter but not in belowground litter due to the lower frequency and larger amount of precipitation compared to the control treatment. Furthermore, exclusion of 30% precipitation had no significant effects on decomposition of either surface or belowground litter. We observed stronger synergistic effect for belowground litter mixture relative to surface litter mixture of the two shrubs, especially in the hotter months over the 5-month incubation.DiscussionThese findings support that rainfall variability in terms of distribution pattern rather than in the amount controls the litter decomposition on the soil surface in the semi-arid shrubland. Meanwhile, soil burial or litter mixing have greater effects on litter decomposition, individually or jointly. Together, our results highlight the need to consider rainfall distribution variability and incorporate soil-covering and litter-mixing as driving factors of organic matter turnover in drylands.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1664-462X
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publishDate 2025-02-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
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series Frontiers in Plant Science
spelling doaj-art-aa438053ca0e48b6879cd0f1e6ba56152025-02-05T22:59:42ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2025-02-011610.3389/fpls.2025.14551701455170Rainfall distribution variability controls surface but not belowground litter decomposition in a semi-arid shrublandYulin LiLi ChengHonglin YangRui ZhangZhiying NingIntroductionRainfall patterns are expected to become increasingly erratic as a result of global climate change, with more intense but less frequent rainfall events leading to an increased occurrence of drought events. This process may lead to significant declines in vegetation cover and subsequent increases in soil erosion, consequently accelerating the bury of detached litter by soil deposition and the mixture of residues from different plant species. Responses of litter decomposition to increasing rainfall variability in distribution and subsequent litter mixing or soil cover have scarcely received attention.MethodsTo fill this gap in our knowledge, we analyzed the influence of rainfall variability, soil cover, and litter mixing on shrub-species litter decomposition in a semi-arid shrubland. We explored the effects of redistributing the frequency and amount of precipitation on surface and belowground decomposition of litter from two separate or mixed predominant shrubs.ResultsDecomposition of belowground litter was consistently higher than that of surface litter over the entire field-incubation process. Mass loss significantly decreased in surface litter but not in belowground litter due to the lower frequency and larger amount of precipitation compared to the control treatment. Furthermore, exclusion of 30% precipitation had no significant effects on decomposition of either surface or belowground litter. We observed stronger synergistic effect for belowground litter mixture relative to surface litter mixture of the two shrubs, especially in the hotter months over the 5-month incubation.DiscussionThese findings support that rainfall variability in terms of distribution pattern rather than in the amount controls the litter decomposition on the soil surface in the semi-arid shrubland. Meanwhile, soil burial or litter mixing have greater effects on litter decomposition, individually or jointly. Together, our results highlight the need to consider rainfall distribution variability and incorporate soil-covering and litter-mixing as driving factors of organic matter turnover in drylands.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpls.2025.1455170/fulldecomposition constantprecipitation frequencyprecipitation amountmass lossmixed effect
spellingShingle Yulin Li
Li Cheng
Honglin Yang
Rui Zhang
Zhiying Ning
Rainfall distribution variability controls surface but not belowground litter decomposition in a semi-arid shrubland
Frontiers in Plant Science
decomposition constant
precipitation frequency
precipitation amount
mass loss
mixed effect
title Rainfall distribution variability controls surface but not belowground litter decomposition in a semi-arid shrubland
title_full Rainfall distribution variability controls surface but not belowground litter decomposition in a semi-arid shrubland
title_fullStr Rainfall distribution variability controls surface but not belowground litter decomposition in a semi-arid shrubland
title_full_unstemmed Rainfall distribution variability controls surface but not belowground litter decomposition in a semi-arid shrubland
title_short Rainfall distribution variability controls surface but not belowground litter decomposition in a semi-arid shrubland
title_sort rainfall distribution variability controls surface but not belowground litter decomposition in a semi arid shrubland
topic decomposition constant
precipitation frequency
precipitation amount
mass loss
mixed effect
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpls.2025.1455170/full
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