The legacy of forest disturbance on stream ecosystem functioning
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2759935Utgivelsesdato
2021Metadata
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Sammendrag
1. Forest clearance is a pervasive disturbance worldwide, but many of its impacts
are regarded as transient, diminishing in intensity as forest recovers. However,
forests can take decades to centuries to recover after severe disturbances, and
temporal lags in recovery of ecosystem properties for different forest habitats are
mostly unknown. This includes forest streams, where most studies of the impacts
of forest clearance are restricted to the first years of recovery, typically finding
that temporary increases in light and nutrient run-off diminish as forest recovers.
Implications of longer term changes remain little investigated.
2. In a space-for-time substitution experiment, we assessed changes in organic matter
processing and in the functional and taxonomic composition of litter-consuming
detritivores along a riparian forest age gradient ranging from 1 to 120 years since
last timber harvesting.
3. Variation in organic matter processing and detritivore functional diversity along
the forest succession gradient were both expressed as second-order polynomial
relationships (peaking at ~50 years along the forest age gradient). Decomposition
rates were lowest in both the more recently clear-cut and older riparian forest
streams.
4. Variation of litter decomposition rates among litter bags within streams, meas ured by the coefficient of variation, was lowest in recent clear-cuts and increased
linearly along the succession gradient. This result indicates higher within-stream
heterogeneity in decomposition rates in older forest streams.
5. Synthesis and applications. We found that the decomposition of leaf litter, a com ponent of carbon cycling in forests, was higher in streams flowing through inter mediately aged forest, and that several key attributes of the organisms regulating
litter decomposition also varied systematically with forest age. These findings
highlight the longer term consequences of forest succession following forest
clear-cutting for stream habitats. Our findings further illustrate complications
arising from the use of forested sites as references for newly cleared sites without
properly accounting for forest age, given conclusions regarding biotic responses
will depend on the age of the reference forests. Finally, our results emphasise the
potential of intensive forest management centred on vast, one-time clear-cutting
events to drive long-term homogenisation not only in forest age structure but also
in the functioning of associated forest stream habitats..
clear-cutting, detritivores, disturbance legacy, forest succession, forestry, functional diversity,
litter decomposition, space-for-time substitution