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1 cant effect on photodecomposition of sorghum litter.
2 remaining, and induced N accumulation in the litter.
3 always increased carbon : nitrogen ratios in litter.
4 nin ratios and lower lignin:N ratios than WT litter.
5 d microbial decomposition of newly deposited litter.
6 ere structured based on the presence of root litter.
7 increased N and phosphorus remaining of the litter.
8 s mean litter size to about nine piglets per litter.
9 its influence on the rate of N release from litter.
10 on large-scale trait variation for riparian litter.
11 placed inside deadwood, tree holes and leaf litter.
12 f clean-up operations or $8,900 per tonne of litter.
13 birth weights of singleton and of twin lamb litters.
14 female pups were recruited in the new males' litters.
17 gyres are the oceanic regions where plastic litter accumulates over long timescales, exposing surrou
18 he responses of AM fungi in a long-term leaf litter addition and removal experiment in a tropical for
20 l minerals declined in response to long-term litter addition, suggesting that increased plant inputs
22 or IVF and 73.3 +/- 8.1% for ICSI) failed to litter after embryo transfer compared to embryos from ma
23 sequence, knockout females have their second litters after shorter times and have a higher infanticid
24 stainable way on the productive performance, litter and cecal microbial counts, and improved economic
25 eased with a denser shrub layer, deeper leaf litter and higher humidity (characteristics for unmanage
27 eground biomass (AGB), coverage, height, and litter and negatively correlated with air temperature, t
28 hat more studies are needed to differentiate litter and rhizosphere effects within single systems to
29 Invasive plants affect soil biota through litter and rhizosphere inputs, but the direction and mag
30 analysis to examine the different effects of litter and rhizosphere of invasive plants on soil commun
31 changes in soil carbon depend on changes in litter and root inputs from plants and especially on red
32 constrained than C:nutrient ratios for both litter and soil microbial communities, suggesting that s
35 barcode reference library for soil, poultry litter, and nest dwelling mites in the Western Palearcti
40 ion of the aqueous phase from HTC of poultry litter as a means to concentrate nutrients and its subse
41 In March 2019, we removed as much plastic litter as possible from Aldabra Atoll, a remote UNESCO W
42 gnant women are advised against handling cat litter, as maternal infection with T. gondii can be tran
43 results highlight a distinct sensitivity of litter-associated microbial communities in streams to ch
47 Here, we explore the relationship between litter breakdown and the variation in community structur
51 little is known about what, or who, mediates litter breakdown in this compartment and whether breakdo
56 7 and TLR8 reportedly results in male-biased litters by selectively disrupting the motility of X-bear
58 limitation may suppress decomposition of new litter C inputs, release of physicochemically protected
59 alive roots in the litterbags decreased root litter C remaining but significantly increased N and pho
60 nditions, whereby decreased decomposition of litter C was compensated by more extensive loss of miner
67 f soil nutrient cycling, litter decay rates, litter chemistry and fungal community structure to the r
70 during decomposition suggests that change in litter chemistry is driven more by distinct microbial ne
72 lts highlight the complex interactions among litter chemistry, soil biota, and minerals in mediating
73 de ones such as maximum life span or typical litter/clutch size, for 65% of threatened tetrapods.
74 air humidity, we estimated that most of the litter CO2 efflux and decay occurring in the dry season
75 of large predatory arthropods in forest leaf-litter communities altered lower trophic levels and litt
76 s) in field mesocosms replicated in the leaf-litter community of Iberian beech forests that differed
80 ccumulation of microbial necromass can drive litter compositional change, but the extent to which the
81 rescence (EEM-PARAFAC) indicated the chicken litter contained a biologically reactive fluorescent DOM
82 er decomposition can play in shaping surface litter contribution to soil organic matter as it respond
83 s decomposition; the earliest stages of leaf litter decay are associated with a net import of N from
84 rests, we found no significant difference in litter decay rate between mycorrhizal groups, and variat
85 in the Pinus-dominated site, only the Pinus litter decay rates were decelerated by EM fungi and were
86 sured the response of soil nutrient cycling, litter decay rates, litter chemistry and fungal communit
88 perimental N deposition has slowed fine root litter decay, and increased the contribution of lignin-d
93 reflect ecological strategies of two fungal litter decomposer Gymnopus androsaceus and Chalara longi
94 e been well studied, but responses of fungal litter decomposers, which directly affect fuels, remain
95 ressed this knowledge gap by studying needle litter decomposition along a boreal forest climate trans
96 le ecosystem consequences through impacts on litter decomposition and further biogeochemical processe
97 sitive soil invertebrates, thereby retarding litter decomposition and nutrient cycling in ecosystems.
98 ystem functioning by enhancing productivity, litter decomposition and resistance to natural enemies.
99 CO2 ) uptake, which depends largely on plant litter decomposition and the subsequent release of CO2 b
101 the role that microbial inputs during early litter decomposition can play in shaping surface litter
102 n and magnitude of EM fungal effects on leaf litter decomposition have been shown to vary among studi
104 oser diversity and abundance explain reduced litter decomposition in response to stressors but not to
109 c evaluation of nonadditive effects in mixed litter decomposition studies and show that litter qualit
111 O and A soil layers when N was derived from litter decomposition than from mineral N additions (60%
112 al degradation, but they only partly explain litter decomposition under dry conditions, suggesting th
113 trophic levels and indirect impacts on leaf-litter decomposition using litter of understorey hazel,
114 results suggest that chemical changes during litter decomposition will change with climate, driven pr
115 large predatory arthropods strongly impacted litter decomposition, and their effect interacted with t
116 ectomycorrhizal fungi did not always hamper litter decomposition, ectomycorrhizal nitrogen uptake al
119 exity in interaction with drought influenced litter decomposition, soil CO(2) efflux, mycorrhizal col
120 eorganizes belowground communities and slows litter decomposition, thereby influencing savanna fuel d
131 ly different in solutions containing poultry litter DOM compared to solutions with SRN, indicating th
132 -out (STM KO) mice are unable to nurse their litters due to frank impairment of mammary gland develop
133 that in turn stimulate nutrient release via litter effect, and enhance nutrient uptake by reducing r
135 wever, monkeys born into same- and mixed-sex litters exhibited subtle morphological and neurobehavior
136 albedo had lost 1.4 and 2.5% more mass than litter exposed to a low UV/high visible and low UV/low v
138 trates that BIOs are capable of sorbing leaf litter-extracted DOM and Suwannee River Humic/Fulvic Aci
139 lved organic matter (DOM) from three poultry litter extracts was modeled to identify contributions fr
141 l renewal and microbiota abundance along the litter-feeding termite Cornitermes cumulans gut compartm
142 e physicochemical properties of the gut in a litter-feeding termite, expanding our view in relation t
143 oupled from predominantly SSS-driven surface litter flammability across species; this finding needs e
144 ove species showed a significant increase in litter foliar TP and soil porewater inorganic P concentr
145 ated with C1 litter size, suggesting smaller litters following years with earlier sea-ice breakup.
146 f two varieties of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) litter for 200-d, in southern Minnesota using litterbags
148 anisms with a decomposition experiment using litter from four abundant species (Achnatherum sibiricum
150 By weight, the composition is dominated by litter from the regional fishing industry (83%) and flip
153 agreed with initial litter chemistry, as DM litter had higher initial N, neutral detergent fiber (ND
155 ese data demonstrate that prewean culling of litters has no benefit, trio breeding is an effective pr
159 from which to observe the problem of plastic litter in the marine environment, but few studies have s
161 ex composition (i.e., same- or mixed-sex) of litters influences perinatal outcomes in the common marm
163 m living root inputs (i.e. rhizodeposits) vs litter inputs (i.e. root + shoot litter) are poorly unde
165 d this by separately tracking living root vs litter inputs as they move through the soil food web and
168 ot inputs are 2-13 times more efficient than litter inputs in forming both slow-cycling, mineral-asso
170 y to differentially track its living root vs litter inputs into the soil and to assess net SOC format
173 iotic conditions and substrate availability (litter inputs) on trace greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes, we
174 tation types, possibly due to differences in litter inputs, root distributions, substrate quality, wa
175 oil, and responses to land use change, plant litter inputs, warming, CO(2) enrichment, and N fertiliz
176 ty of nonadditive effects of living root and litter inputs, which may deplete SOC pools despite great
178 portionate quantities of chemically distinct litter, invasive plants may potentially influence the fa
182 nistic effects when soil fauna are absent or litter is in very late stages of decomposition (near-hum
185 S21 and CTL19 showed significantly increased litter Lactobacillus spp. (P < 0.05) compared to other t
186 bial phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs) in the litter layer and measured natural abundance delta(13) C(
189 ching of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from litter layer to the topsoil is the major cause of rain-i
191 stewater treatment facility effluent, turkey litter leachate, and concentrated river DOM did not stim
193 ailability of DOM in WWTP effluent; and leaf-litter leachates of helophytes used in bioengineering te
194 the epilithic biofilm to the inputs of leaf-litter leachates were compared to those measured using a
195 Our findings reveal an important role of litter-leached DOC input in regulating rain-induced soil
196 ch, reward contagion produced by higher leaf litter levels resulted in greater abundance of beetles i
197 We conducted a moss transplant and leaf litter manipulation experiment at three sites with paire
198 rom the dry to the wet season in a long-term litter manipulation experiment in Panama, Central Americ
199 Although we observed no clear effect of litter manipulation on trace GHG fluxes, tree species an
201 f the conditional mutants were compared with litter-matched controls, global BK knockout, and wild-ty
202 overy rapidly decreased over time in surface litter material and accumulated in both shallow and deep
203 icult to retrieve as a constituent of marine litter, means of reducing its presence and impacts will
205 ic effects occur concurrently, and the final litter mixing effect results from the interplay between
208 tum, Leymus chinensis and Stipa grandis) and litter mixtures representing treatment-specific communit
210 the median injury in each group within each litter (n = 277, 44.5%) were also analysed using formal
211 itters decayed faster than ECM litters, with litter nitrogen and phylogeny best explaining variation
212 A warmer climate was associated with higher litter nitrogen concentrations as well as altered microb
215 ated predictions for differential effects of litter nutrition and secondary polyphenolic compounds on
221 n the serious detrimental effects of plastic litter on marine ecosystems, we conclude that clean-up e
222 ned the impacts of forest type and broadleaf litter on microbial community composition and N(2) -fixa
223 l fungi appear to slow decomposition of leaf litter only in forests where litter inputs are highly re
225 ne intensities than those fuelled by conifer litter or weedy angiosperms, and whilst fern understorie
227 Islands' exposure to such contaminants, littered over long distances in marine or terrestrial ha
228 The 'size and shape spectrum' (SSS) includes litter particle size and shape and their consequent effe
231 The combined mass of just the three most-littered plastics (polyethylene, polypropylene, and poly
232 nsboundary nature of both the marine plastic litter problem and the ecosystem services provided by bi
235 d litter decomposition studies and show that litter quality alters the effects of litter mixing.
236 own rates is uncertain, given differences in litter quality and microbial and detritivore community r
239 providing a predictive framework for linking litter quality, organic matter dynamics and nutrient acq
243 eductions in organic matter brought about by litter removal may lead to AM fungi obtaining nutrients
247 creased reproductive allocation as clutch or litter size increases, affecting current and residual re
249 ecrease in birthweights and ~30% decrease in litter size was observed, supportive of placental insuff
250 s, embryonic implantation, gestation period, litter size, and offspring viability were not affected b
251 arly life stressor, we examined birthweight, litter size, maternal cannibalism, and epigenetic modifi
253 vious year was positively correlated with C1 litter size, suggesting smaller litters following years
259 eficient female mice have severely decreased litter sizes owing to primary maternal dystocia that is
262 er to track decomposed N in the soil system (litter, soils, microbes, and roots) over 18 months in a
263 orest composition towards more nitrogen-poor litter species should decrease trematode infection in ta
264 e shifts also involve increased abundance of litter species with high polyphenolic levels, which shou
267 c gene therapy restores breeding efficiency, litter survival and normal growth rates in mouse models
268 fungal communities with fire were greater in litter than in soils, but unaffected by pine proximity.
270 Genetically diverse groups produced root litter that had higher nitrogen (N) content, decomposed
272 tter had lost > 50% of its initial mass, and litter that was exposed to a high UV/high visible surfac
273 bs, but extending care reduced the number of litters that mothers could produce during their lifetime
275 ent resulted in a greater proportion of leaf litter, the dominant resource flow-pathway, being consum
276 our females were selected randomly from each litter to be nursed by dams, whereas tissues were collec
280 f EM fungi (via trenching) with a reciprocal litter transplant experiment in adjacent Pinus- or Querc
281 lation on trace GHG fluxes, tree species and litter treatments interacted to influence CH(4) fluxes f
282 e we explicitly examine how contrasting leaf litter types and EM fungal communities may lead to diffe
285 and a temperate cropland Mollisol-with added litter under either aerobic (control) or anaerobic condi
287 g the lightest versus heaviest placenta in a litter, unidirectional maternofetal clearance (K(mf) ) o
288 y) of within-patch resource abundances (leaf litter) using an experimental landscape of mesocosms, an
289 we found that oxidative activity in surface litters was most significantly correlated to the abundan
290 s (24-36 hours old) from same- and mixed-sex litters were indistinguishable by urinary androgen profi
291 and both male and female pups from multiple litters were injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 100
292 cialisation treatment while the remaining 12 litters were kept isolated within their home pen (i.e. c
296 s show that all urban mammals produce larger litters; whereas other traits such as body size, behavio
297 were variable and differed within and across litters, which ranged from the absence of observable abn
300 forests, AM litters decayed faster than ECM litters, with litter nitrogen and phylogeny best explain