CARBON SEQUESTRATION IN ECOSYSTEMS: THE ROLE OF STOICHIOMETRY
University of Oslo · Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences · +3 more institutions
Abstract
The fate of carbon (C) in organisms, food webs, and ecosystems is to a major extent regulated by mass-balance principles and the availability of other key nutrient elements. In relative terms, nutrient limitation implies excess C, yet the fate of this C may be quite different in autotrophs and heterotrophs. For autotrophs nutrient limitation means less fixation of inorganic C or excretion of organic C, while for heterotrophs nutrient limitation means that more of ingested C will “go to waste” in the form of egestion or respiration. There is in general a mismatch between autotrophs and decomposers that have flexible but generally high C:element ratios, and consumers that have lower C:element ratios and tighter…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.70
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 135
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Autotroph
- Decomposer
- Ecosystem
- Heterotroph
- Detritus
- Ecology
- Nutrient
- Biomass (ecology)