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Litter production and decomposition in the New Zealand mangrove,Avicennia marinavar.resinifera

 

作者: C. D. Woodroffe,  

 

期刊: New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research  (Taylor Available online 1982)
卷期: Volume 16, issue 2  

页码: 179-188

 

ISSN:0028-8330

 

年代: 1982

 

DOI:10.1080/00288330.1982.9515961

 

出版商: Taylor & Francis Group

 

关键词: Avicennia marinavar.resinifera;Avicenniaceae;biological production;degradation;detritus;litter;mangrove swamps

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

The New Zealand mangrove,Avicennia marinavar.resinifera,grows close to the latitudinal limit of mangroves. Nevertheless, litter‐fall studies in Tuff Crater, Auckland (36°48’ S, 174°45’ E), using litter‐fall bag and plot techniques, indicate that the mangroves are very productive. Litter fall beneath 2 distinct growth forms of the mangrove is seasonal, with peak fall at the time of fruit production in summer. Beneath the taller mangroves of the creek banks (3.5–4.0 m tall) annual total dry weight of litter fall is estimated as 8.10±2.74 t ha‐1a‐1, whereas beneath the lower, stunted mangroves of the flats (<1.0 m tall), the total is estimated as 3.65 t ha‐1a‐1. The values from the taller mangroves are higher than litter fall recorded beneathAvicenniaat similar latitudes in Australia, and lie within the range reported from mangroves in Queensland, Florida, and elsewhere. They suggest that, in terms of litter, mangroves may be one of the most productive forest types in New Zealand. The rate of decomposition of mangrove leaves, using the litter bag technique, was rapid, with half of the ash‐free weight being lost in 6–8 weeks. Differences between decomposition rates in summer and in winter appear to be small, and site‐specific differences were not discernible.

 

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