Decomposition and changes in chemical composition of leaf litter of five dominant tree species in a West African tropical forest
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Abstract
The objective of the research was to study the rate of decomposition and changes
in the chemical characteristics in the leaf litter of selected tree species using a litterbag
experiment. The decomposition of leaf litter from five dominant tree species, Afzelia africana,
Anogeissus leiocarpa, Ceiba pentandra, Dialium guineense, and Diospyros mespiliformis was
studied in the Lama forest reserve, a tropical vertisol forest in Benin. Changes in litter mass
and organic compounds, including acid-hydrolysable (AH), water-soluble (WS) and ethanolsoluble
(ES) compounds and Klason lignin, were determined every 4 weeks over 6-months
period. The carbon (C), nitrogen (N), organic matter (OM) and ash contents of fresh litter were
also determined. The high differences in the initial litter quality across the species resulted in a
large variation of the absolute decay rate (ka values), ranging from 1.69 to 4.67 year-1. The key
chemical controls of leaf decomposition were the initial concentrations of AH, lignin and N. The
specific decay rates (ks values) of AH, WS, ES and Klason lignin varied significantly within and
across species and described leaf litter as composed of labile and recalcitrant C pools having
different decay patterns. WS and ES had the highest ks values of 4.65 to 11.96 year-1 and 4.06 to
21.27 year-1, respectively, whereas AH had ks values of 1.14 to 4.74 year-1 and seemed to impose
its decay pattern on the whole litter. The results supported the hypothesis that litter chemistry
was the main factor controlling the decomposition process at a local scale.
