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Insect Herbivory Increases Litter Quality and Decomposition: An Extension of the Acceleration Hypothesis

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Stephen C Hart, George W Koch, Neil S Cobb, Thomas G Whitham, and Samantha K Chapman, Insect Herbivory Increases Litter Quality and Decomposition: An Extension of the Acceleration Hypothesis: .

Summary

Herbivore alteration of litter inputs may change litter decomposition rates and influence ecosystem nutrient cycling. In a semiarid woodland at Sunset Crater National Monument, Arizona, long-term insect herbivore removal experiments and the presence of herbivore resistant and susceptible pinyon pines (Pinus edulis) have allowed characterization of the population- and community-level effects of herbivory. Here we report how these same two herbivores, the mesophyll-feeding scale insect Matsucoccus acalyptus and the stem-boring moth Dioryctria albovittella alter litter quality, dynamics, and decomposition in this ecosystem. We measured aboveground litterfall, litter chemical composition, and first-year litter decomposition rates for trees [...]

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From Source - Mendeley RIS export <br> On - Tue May 10 11:47:58 CDT 2011

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Title Citation Insect Herbivory Increases Litter Quality and Decomposition: An Extension of the Acceleration Hypothesis

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