Abstract
Aims
Herbivores create large differences in litter decomposition rates, but identifying how they do this can be difficult because they simultaneously influence both biotic and abiotic factors. In the Yukon-Kuskokwim (Y-K) River Delta in western Alaska, geese are dominant herbivores in wet-sedge meadows, where they create ‘grazing lawns’ that have nutrient-rich litter and an open habitat structure. To understand how geese affect decomposition, we tested the effects of litter quality and habitat type on litter decomposition over one year.
Methods
We performed a litter bag study in which we collected two litter types representing grazed and ungrazed vegetation conditions (high quality litter similar to grazed litter, and lower quality senesced, ungrazed litter), then incubated them in ‘grazing lawn’ and ungrazed meadows. Litter mass loss, carbon, nitrogen, cellulose and lignin content were measured after 3, 6, 9, and 52 weeks. We also monitored abiotic conditions (i.e., soil temperature, UV radiation, throughfall, and soil moisture content) in each habitat type.
Results
High-quality litter (lower lignin:N ratios) lost more mass than low-quality ungrazed litter over the whole study. However, at different times during the decomposition process, lower quality litter decomposed faster in grazed habitat, whereas higher quality litter decomposed faster in ungrazed habitat. This occurred despite abiotic conditions in grazed habitat that generally promote faster decomposition.
Conclusion
Results suggest that herbivore-induced increases in litter quality increase decomposition rates, and that the accumulation of the low-quality litter in ungrazed habitats is partly due to slow decomposition rates. While herbivores influence habitat conditions, the effects of habitat on decomposition differed across litter qualities, which suggests that other variables, such as differing microbial communities, play a role in decomposition processes.