James B. Reeves III’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Chemical diversity - Highlighting a species richness and ecosystem function disconnect
  • Article

November 2007

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74 Reads

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68 Citations

Kimberly Y. Epps

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James B. Reeves III

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The lack of predictability in litter-mix studies may result from the low correlation between species number and the traits that drive the processes under observation. From the standpoint of litter-quality-dependent ecological processes, we propose that litter chemical qualities are functional traits and introduce a multivariate index of chemical diversity (CDQ) based on Rao's quadratic entropy to describe the compositional heterogeneity of litter and foliar mixtures. Using published data from temperate and tropical forest systems to illustrate the relationship between species richness and chemical diversity, we show the variation of chemical diversity based on profiles of total nutrient concentrations (N, P, K, Ca and Mg) with species richness. We discuss how this behavior may explain the idiosyncratic responses exhibited in litter-mix experiments and how it may contribute to the observed dominance of species identity over species diversity. As a summary of resource heterogeneity relevant to detritivore and microbial processes, the chemical diversity index is potentially a better predictor of diversity effects on nutrient dynamics than species richness. Finally, we propose the use of infrared spectroscopy techniques for a rapid and more comprehensive determination of foliar and litter chemical composition to provide a more information-rich index.

Citations (1)


... These results also supported the assumptions we have used to rationalize our second hypothesis, which predicted that due to functional differences in litter quality, the mixture of flower and leaf litter would cause LMEs on the decomposition of both litter types. Studies in both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems have shown that the litter functional dissimilarity rather than litter species number is the most important factor causing LMEs on decomposition (Epps et al., 2007;Lecerf et al., 2011;Violle et al., 2017). Our study supports this paradigm in demonstrating that LMEs on decomposition can also occur intraspecifically via the interaction of flower and leaf litter and call attention to the importance of LMEs on decomposition even in low-diversity systems through the interactions of litter from different plant organs. ...

Reference:

“Blooming” of litter-mixing effects: the role of flower and leaf litter interactions on decomposition in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems
Chemical diversity - Highlighting a species richness and ecosystem function disconnect
  • Citing Article
  • November 2007