Dynamic soil nutrient and moisture changes under decomposing vertebrate carcasses

Date

2019-10-16

Authors

Quaggiotto, Maria-Martina
Evans, Maldwyn
Higgins, Andrew
Strong, Craig
Barton, Philip

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kluwer Academic Publishers

Abstract

The decomposition of animal carcasses contributes to nutrient recycling in ecosystems worldwide, including by delivering nutrients to soil. Although several studies have characterised changes in soil chemistry occurring under carcasses, many ecological studies have occurred over extended postmortem intervals and fine-scale temporal changes in physicochemical conditions are poorly understood. We examined changes in a suite of soil physicochemical properties occurring under decomposing rabbit carcasses during summer in a grassland ecosystem. We found that carcasses lost over 90% of their starting mass and reached dry decay and skeletonization after 20 days of decomposition. Carcass temperatures were up to 15 C higher than ambient temperatures during the active decay stage (days 3 and 5) of decomposition.

Description

Keywords

Decomposition, Carrion, Nitrogen, Necrobiome, Nutrient cycling, Ecosystem, Postmortem, Ecological process, Grassland

Citation

Quaggiotto, MM., Evans, M.J., Higgins, A. et al. Dynamic soil nutrient and moisture changes under decomposing vertebrate carcasses. Biogeochemistry 146, 71–82 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-019-00611-3

Source

Biogeochemistry

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31