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Creators/Authors contains: "Gill, Allison L"

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  1. Summary Coarse roots represent a globally important belowground carbon pool, but the factors controlling coarse root decomposition rates remain poorly understood relative to other plant biomass components. We compiled the most comprehensive dataset of coarse root decomposition data including 148 observations from 60 woody species, and linked coarse root decomposition rates to plant traits, phylogeny and climate to address questions of the dominant controls on coarse root decomposition.We found that decomposition rates increased with mean annual temperature, root nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations. Coarse root decomposition was slower for ectomycorrhizal than arbuscular mycorrhizal associated species, and angiosperm species decomposed faster than gymnosperms. Coarse root decomposition rates and calcium concentrations showed a strong phylogenetic signal.Our findings suggest that categorical traits like mycorrhizal association and phylogenetic group, in conjunction with root quality and climate, collectively serve as the optimal predictors of coarse root decomposition rates.Our findings propose a paradigm of the dominant controls on coarse decomposition, with mycorrhizal association and phylogeny acting as critical roles on coarse root decomposition, necessitating their explicit consideration in Earth‐system models and ultimately improving confidence in projected carbon cycle–climate feedbacks. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 25, 2025
  2. Abstract Plant litter decomposition is a central process in the carbon (C) cycle and sensitive to ongoing anthropogenic nitrogen (N) fertilisation. Previous syntheses evaluating the effect of N fertilisation on litter decomposition relied largely on models that define a constant rate of mass loss throughout decomposition, which may mask hypothesised shifts in the effect of N fertilisation on litter decomposition dynamics. In this meta‐analysis, we compared the performance of four empirical decomposition models and showed that N fertilisation consistently accelerates early‐stage but slows late‐stage decomposition when the model structure allows for flexibility in decomposition rates through time. Within a particular substrate, early‐stage N‐stimulation of decomposition was associated with reduced rates of late‐stage decay. Because the products of early‐ vs. late‐stage decomposition are stabilised in soils through distinct chemical and physical mechanisms, N‐induced changes in the litter decomposition process may influence the formation and cycling of soil C, the largest terrestrial C pool. 
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