Impacts of land-use intensification on litter decomposition in western Kenya

IF 2.3 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Web Ecology Pub Date : 2016-02-11 DOI:10.5194/WE-16-51-2016
G. Kagezi, M. Kaib, P. Nyeko, C. Bakuneeta, M. Schädler, J. Stadler, R. Brandl
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Abstract. Tropical forests are faced with a substantial loss of forest cover due to human activities. The various forms of land use influence habitat structure, microclimate, and co-occurring species, with possible effects on ecosystem processes. The forests of western Kenya are the most eastern parts of the Congolian rainforests. Due to the high human population density only few remnants of these rainforests remained. Even protected areas are influenced by human disturbances, with unknown effects on ecosystem processes. Therefore, we quantified the mass loss of leaf litter with and without access of soil invertebrates within forest fragments and sites affected by increasing levels of agricultural land-use intensity in the Kakamega area (western Kenya; 1500 m a.s.l.). Mass loss of litter as an estimate of decomposition rate increased with rainfall during the annual cycle. Furthermore, mass loss increased with the area of forest fragments and decreased with land-use intensification. We found that soil invertebrates had only small effects on mass loss (
肯尼亚西部土地利用集约化对凋落物分解的影响
摘要由于人类活动,热带森林面临着森林覆盖的大量损失。不同形式的土地利用影响生境结构、小气候和共生物种,并可能对生态系统过程产生影响。肯尼亚西部的森林是刚果雨林最东部的部分。由于人口密度高,这些热带雨林只剩下很少的遗迹。即使是保护区也受到人类干扰的影响,对生态系统过程的影响是未知的。因此,我们量化了Kakamega地区(肯尼亚西部;海拔1500米)。在年循环中,凋落物的质量损失作为分解率的估计值随着降雨量的增加而增加。质量损失随森林破碎片面积增加而增加,随土地利用集约化而减少。我们发现土壤无脊椎动物对质量损失的影响很小(
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来源期刊
Web Ecology
Web Ecology Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
审稿时长
17 weeks
期刊介绍: Web Ecology (WE) is an open-access journal issued by the European Ecological Federation (EEF) representing the ecological societies within Europe and associated members. Its special value is to serve as a publication forum for national ecological societies that do not maintain their own society journal. Web Ecology publishes papers from all fields of ecology without any geographic restriction. It is a forum to communicate results of experimental, theoretical, and descriptive studies of general interest to an international audience. Original contributions, short communications, and reviews on ecological research on all kinds of organisms and ecosystems are welcome as well as papers that express emerging ideas and concepts with a sound scientific background.
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