Decomposition of forest litter is a complex process
involving interactions between physical, chemical and
biological factors. As litter decomposes it is chemically
altered. Cation exchange capacities of litter represent a
means of characterizing the number of hydrophilic acid
groups. Some kind of soil-root ion exchange mechanisms are
utilized by the...
The understory vegetation was sampled in eight plant communities
of a Douglas-fir ecosystem to determine the organic matter
production and mineral composition.
Four sample sites were selected in each plant community and
the understory vegetation sampled using the method of quadrats of
successively increasing size. All herbaceous plants were separated...
Asymbiotic N fixation in leaf litter in the Northwest was assayed by acetylene reduction. Annual N input measured by periodic sampling in a young Willamette Valley Douglas-fir plantation at Adair, Oregon was 1.08 +_.13 kg/ha. Using different calculating methods, six other annual
estimates at the Adair site ranged from 0...
The characteristics and interactions of the riparian
stand, large woody debris (LWD), and channel morphology
were examined on five undisturbed, low gradient streams in
southeast Alaska. One first-, two second-, one third-,
and one fourth-order streams were studied. Stream
morphology variables were measured systematically at fixed
intervals of three to...
Coarse woody debris (CWD) decomposition in the Russian boreal forests of the southern taiga zone was studied at four sites located near St. Petersburg in Northwestern Russia, Krasnoyarsk in Eastern Siberia, lrkutsk in the Baikal region, and Khabarovsk in the Russian Far East. This study was part of a broader...
The rate and manner of bioniass loss from decomposing Douglas-fir and western hemlock boles in mid-elevation forests of the central Cascade Range were measured. Bole bark and wood were considered separately. Loss of bole wood due to respiration was measured by change in bole wood density. Loss of bole wood...