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. 2021 Sep;597(7874):77-81.
doi: 10.1038/s41586-021-03740-8. Epub 2021 Sep 1.

The contribution of insects to global forest deadwood decomposition

Sebastian Seibold  1   2   3   4 Werner Rammer  5 Torsten Hothorn  6 Rupert Seidl  5   7 Michael D Ulyshen  8 Janina Lorz  9 Marc W Cadotte  10 David B Lindenmayer  11 Yagya P Adhikari  12   13 Roxana Aragón  14 Soyeon Bae  15 Petr Baldrian  16 Hassan Barimani Varandi  17 Jos Barlow  18   19 Claus Bässler  20   21 Jacques Beauchêne  22 Erika Berenguer  18   23 Rodrigo S Bergamin  24 Tone Birkemoe  25 Gergely Boros  26   27 Roland Brandl  28 Hervé Brustel  29 Philip J Burton  30 Yvonne T Cakpo-Tossou  31 Jorge Castro  32 Eugénie Cateau  29   33 Tyler P Cobb  34 Nina Farwig  35 Romina D Fernández  14 Jennifer Firn  36   37 Kee Seng Gan  38 Grizelle González  39 Martin M Gossner  40 Jan C Habel  41 Christian Hébert  42 Christoph Heibl  21 Osmo Heikkala  43 Andreas Hemp  44 Claudia Hemp  44 Joakim Hjältén  45 Stefan Hotes  46 Jari Kouki  47 Thibault Lachat  40   48 Jie Liu  49 Yu Liu  50 Ya-Huang Luo  49 Damasa M Macandog  51 Pablo E Martina  52 Sharif A Mukul  53 Baatarbileg Nachin  54 Kurtis Nisbet  55 John O'Halloran  56 Anne Oxbrough  57 Jeev Nath Pandey  58 Tomáš Pavlíček  59 Stephen M Pawson  60   61 Jacques S Rakotondranary  62   63 Jean-Baptiste Ramanamanjato  64 Liana Rossi  65 Jürgen Schmidl  66 Mark Schulze  67 Stephen Seaton  68 Marisa J Stone  69 Nigel E Stork  69 Byambagerel Suran  54 Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson  25 Simon Thorn  9 Ganesh Thyagarajan  70 Timothy J Wardlaw  71 Wolfgang W Weisser  72 Sungsoo Yoon  73 Naili Zhang  74 Jörg Müller  9   21
Affiliations

The contribution of insects to global forest deadwood decomposition

Sebastian Seibold et al. Nature. 2021 Sep.

Abstract

The amount of carbon stored in deadwood is equivalent to about 8 per cent of the global forest carbon stocks1. The decomposition of deadwood is largely governed by climate2-5 with decomposer groups-such as microorganisms and insects-contributing to variations in the decomposition rates2,6,7. At the global scale, the contribution of insects to the decomposition of deadwood and carbon release remains poorly understood7. Here we present a field experiment of wood decomposition across 55 forest sites and 6 continents. We find that the deadwood decomposition rates increase with temperature, and the strongest temperature effect is found at high precipitation levels. Precipitation affects the decomposition rates negatively at low temperatures and positively at high temperatures. As a net effect-including the direct consumption by insects and indirect effects through interactions with microorganisms-insects accelerate the decomposition in tropical forests (3.9% median mass loss per year). In temperate and boreal forests, we find weak positive and negative effects with a median mass loss of 0.9 per cent and -0.1 per cent per year, respectively. Furthermore, we apply the experimentally derived decomposition function to a global map of deadwood carbon synthesized from empirical and remote-sensing data, obtaining an estimate of 10.9 ± 3.2 petagram of carbon per year released from deadwood globally, with 93 per cent originating from tropical forests. Globally, the net effect of insects may account for 29 per cent of the carbon flux from deadwood, which suggests a functional importance of insects in the decomposition of deadwood and the carbon cycle.

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References

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