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Decomposition of grasses in a South African savanna

Tropical and subtropical grasslands ecologists have ignored decomposition, because of the important role it plays in nutrient cycling, in terms of understanding how grass litter gets to the soil during the dry season. The major flaw is in the method~ employed to l investigate decomposition. In the p...

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Main Author: Masubelele, Mmoto Leonard
Other Authors: Bond, WJ
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Masubelele, Mmoto Leonard
author2 Bond, WJ
author_browse Bond, WJ
Masubelele, Mmoto Leonard
author_facet Bond, WJ
Masubelele, Mmoto Leonard
author_sort Masubelele, Mmoto Leonard
collection Thesis
description Tropical and subtropical grasslands ecologists have ignored decomposition, because of the important role it plays in nutrient cycling, in terms of understanding how grass litter gets to the soil during the dry season. The major flaw is in the method~ employed to l investigate decomposition. In the prairies and steppes, litterbag methods employed investigate decomposition when litter is on the soil, even though the importance of carryover from standing litter is recognized. Standing litter results in high carryover which slows down decomposition thereby hindering productivity in the next growing season. I therefore decided to investigate the processes of photodegradation and microbial decomposition, as well as carryover and also how these processes differ between mesic and semi-arid grasslands. Since previous studies suggest that tallgrass prairies experience more carryover and slower decomposition than shortgrass prairies, I therefore hypothesized in this thesis that mesic grasslands will experience more carryover and slower decomposition than semi-arid grasslands. Results from this thesis showed that standing litter decomposition was slower than surface soil decomposition; hence photodegradation was slower than microbial decomposition. Photodegradation was important in controlling the rate of decomposition among the different grass species standing litter. Different grass species decomposed at different rates. Different plant traits were responsible for decomposition rates of standing litter and surface soil litter. Tensile strength and polyphenolic content were important during initial and final decomposition of standing litter whereas for the surface soil litter the same factors together with CIN ratio and lignin were important. Carryover existed in mesic grasslands but not so much in semi-arid grasslands. This implies that mesic grasslands are phylogenetically designed to bum while semi-arid grasslands are controlled by herbivory.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39958
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:03.682Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39958 Decomposition of grasses in a South African savanna Masubelele, Mmoto Leonard Bond, WJ Stock, WD [Page 96 is located after page 124, and page 111 proceeds] Tropical and subtropical grasslands ecologists have ignored decomposition, because of the important role it plays in nutrient cycling, in terms of understanding how grass litter gets to the soil during the dry season. The major flaw is in the method~ employed to l investigate decomposition. In the prairies and steppes, litterbag methods employed investigate decomposition when litter is on the soil, even though the importance of carryover from standing litter is recognized. Standing litter results in high carryover which slows down decomposition thereby hindering productivity in the next growing season. I therefore decided to investigate the processes of photodegradation and microbial decomposition, as well as carryover and also how these processes differ between mesic and semi-arid grasslands. Since previous studies suggest that tallgrass prairies experience more carryover and slower decomposition than shortgrass prairies, I therefore hypothesized in this thesis that mesic grasslands will experience more carryover and slower decomposition than semi-arid grasslands. Results from this thesis showed that standing litter decomposition was slower than surface soil decomposition; hence photodegradation was slower than microbial decomposition. Photodegradation was important in controlling the rate of decomposition among the different grass species standing litter. Different grass species decomposed at different rates. Different plant traits were responsible for decomposition rates of standing litter and surface soil litter. Tensile strength and polyphenolic content were important during initial and final decomposition of standing litter whereas for the surface soil litter the same factors together with CIN ratio and lignin were important. Carryover existed in mesic grasslands but not so much in semi-arid grasslands. This implies that mesic grasslands are phylogenetically designed to bum while semi-arid grasslands are controlled by herbivory. 2024-06-19T08:56:29Z 2024-06-19T08:56:29Z 2007 2024-06-19T08:44:39Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39958 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle [Page 96 is located after page 124, and page 111 proceeds]
Masubelele, Mmoto Leonard
Decomposition of grasses in a South African savanna
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Decomposition of grasses in a South African savanna
title_full Decomposition of grasses in a South African savanna
title_fullStr Decomposition of grasses in a South African savanna
title_full_unstemmed Decomposition of grasses in a South African savanna
title_short Decomposition of grasses in a South African savanna
title_sort decomposition of grasses in a south african savanna
topic [Page 96 is located after page 124, and page 111 proceeds]
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39958
work_keys_str_mv AT masubelelemmotoleonard decompositionofgrassesinasouthafricansavanna