DECOMPOSITION AND MASS OF WOODY DETRITUS IN THE DRY TROPICAL FORESTS OF THE NORTHEASTERN YUCATAN PENINSULA, MEXICO

Citation
Me. Harmon et al., DECOMPOSITION AND MASS OF WOODY DETRITUS IN THE DRY TROPICAL FORESTS OF THE NORTHEASTERN YUCATAN PENINSULA, MEXICO, Biotropica, 27(3), 1995, pp. 305-316
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Biology,Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00063606
Volume
27
Issue
3
Year of publication
1995
Pages
305 - 316
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-3606(1995)27:3<305:DAMOWD>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
The decomposition rates and mass of fine ( < 10-cm-diameter) and coars e ( > 10-cm-diameter) woody detritus were measured in the dry tropical forests of the northeastern Yucatan Peninsula. The smallest mass of w oody detritus was found in undisturbed stands: fine fractions averaged 4.7 Mg ha(-1) and coarse fractions ranged between 13 and 38 Mg ha(-1) . The largest mass of fine woody detritus (32.2 Mg ha(-1)) was found i n a hurricane-disturbed forest; whereas, the largest mass of coarse wo ody detritus (99.5 Mg ha(-1)) was found in stands disturbed by catastr ophic fires. A decomposition time-series study installed in 1989 indic ated that decomposition rates varied greatly among species and diamete rs of branch segments. Over a 4-year period, the decomposition rate co nstant for fine woody detritus ranged from 0.151 to 1.019 year(-1) and that for coarse woody detritus ranged from 0.008 to 0.615 year(-1). T he half-life of woody detritus increased 33-fold (among pieces ranging from 1 to 30 cm in diameter) for the most decay-resistant species (Ma nilkara zapota) but was relatively constant for the least decay-resist ant species (Bursera simaruba). The wide range in decomposition rates observed in these forests indicates that the poor substrate quality of some species may override climatic (e.g., warm temperatures) and biot ic (e.g., termites) factors favorable to rapid decomposition, leading to a substantial accumulation of woody detritus.