Seasonal Pattern of Decomposition and N, P, and C Dynamics in Leaf Litter in a Mongolian Oak Forest and a Korean Pine Plantation

Distinct seasons and diverse tree species characterize temperate deciduous forests in NE Asia, but large areas of deciduous forests have been converted to conifer plantations. This study was conducted to understand the effects of seasons and tree species on leaf litter decomposition in a temperate forest. Using the litterbag method, the decomposition rate and nitrogen, phosphorous, and carbon dynamics of Mongolian oak (Quercus mongolica), Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis), and their mixed leaf litter were compared for 24 months in a Mongolian oak stand, an adjacent Korean pine plantation, and a Mongolian oak—Korean pine mixed stand. The decomposition rates of all the leaf litter types followed a pattern of distinct seasonal changes: most leaf litter decomposition occurred during the summer. Tree species was less influential on the leaf litter decomposition. The decomposition rates among different leaf litter types within the same stand were not significantly different, indicating no mixed litter effect. The immobilization of leaf litter N and P lasted for 14 months. Mongolian 2562 oak leaf litter and Korean pine leaf litter showed different N and P contents and dynamics during the decomposition, and soil P2O5 was highest in the Korean pine plantation, suggesting effects of plantation on soil nutrient budget.


Introduction
Leaf litter decomposition is a critical step in nutrient cycling and providing nutrients to plants [1].Various factors control leaf litter decomposition, including climate [2], topography [3,4], chemical characteristics of leaf litter [5,6], and terrestrial microbiota [7].Among those factors, climate, especially temperature and precipitation, is a dominant factor determining leaf litter decomposition patterns in regions experiencing distinct seasonal climate change [8].
Every ecosystem has its own physical characteristics and specific environment that foster the distinct features of its species composition.Each tree species affects leaf litter decomposition differently by providing leaf litters of different quality, which are closely related to the terrestrial microbial community and soil nutrient cycling [9,10].In temperate natural forests, plant leaf litter usually decomposes in a mixed-species environment.Mixedwood forests are characterized by diverse soil conditions and biological activity within short distances, increasing the importance of small-spatial-scale research on soil nutrient pools, as well as integrating diverse chemical variables of single or mixed species into different temporal and spatial scales [6,11].However, species composition is one of the factors most altered by human activities as natural mixedwood forests have been converted to single-species plantations.Stand conversion from natural forest to single species plantation changes leaf litter decomposition and eventually alters ecosystem functions [12].
Information on the nutrient cycling within plantations, such as patterns of N, P, and C release, immobilization and mineralization in a decomposing phase, and the planted species' interactions with existing species, is crucial to properly manage plantations and improve their vitality to be similar to natural states [13].However, limited information is available on the effects of a plantation on nutrient cycling at a site and on plantation interactions with existing ecosystems [14].Thus, an increasing number of studies investigate the effect of certain species on the decomposition of single or mixed leaf litters for better plantation management or restoration of natural stands [15,16].Those studies simultaneously integrate features of species, mixed leaf litters, and forest floor conditions by forest type to explain the leaf litter decomposition process [17,18].
Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis Siebold et Zucc.) is a representative species in northern temperate old-growth forests and has been widely planted for wood and pine seeds in NE Asia [19,20].The total plantation area of Korean pine in South Korea is ca.214,357 ha, making Korean pine the third most planted species in Korea [20].Most Korean pine plantations replace oak-dominant broadleaved stands and are still adjacent to broadleaved forests dominated by oak species such as the oriental cork oak (Quercus variabilis Blume), konara oak (Quercus serrata Thunb.), and Mongolian oak.The establishment of Korean pine plantations might alter leaf litter decomposition patterns and affect the nutrient budget of an area.
This study compared leaf litter decomposition characteristics and nutrient dynamics between an oak-dominant secondary deciduous stand and a Korean pine plantation to understand the plantation effect on nutrient cycling.We hypothesized that different leaf litter types would show different leaf litter decomposition rates and nitrogen (N), phosphorous (P), and carbon (C) mineralization patterns by forest type.We expected nutrient transport between the Mongolian oak leaf litter and the Korean pine leaf litter to induce complementary interactions, resulting in a synergistic effect that would give the mixed leaf litter the highest decomposition rate.
Efforts to introduce mixedwood forests that are more ecologically sound and resistant to disturbances than monoculture are increasing in NE Asia [21].Understanding the leaf litter decomposition process in Korean pine plantations would show what happens when a plantation replaces a natural stand and how a plantation interacts with existing ecosystems.

Study Sites
The study was conducted at three types of stands in the Seoul National University Forest at Mt. Taehwa (38°17′16″-38°19′26″ N, 127°16′45″ E; 644 m asl; 796 ha), Gyeonggi Province, Korea.The area is a temperate zone with a continental monsoon climate.The annual mean precipitation in this area is 1371 mm with about sixty percent of the annual precipitation is concentrated between June and August [22].Meteorological data from the weather station of the University Forest during 2009-2011 showed that the annual mean air temperature was 10.9 °C, with a maximum temperature of 33.5 °C in July and a minimum temperature of −21.3 °C in January.It was relatively dry in the winter, with precipitation of 90 mm in the form of snow from December 2010 to February 2011.Snow depth at the study sites ranged from 5 to 20 cm depending on the slope aspect.Soils in the forest are classified as coarse loamy, in the mesic family of Typic Dystrudepts according to the USDA soil classification system [23].Soil parent material was an eluvium of metamorphic rock, such as biotite and granite gneiss.The depth of the leaf litter layer ranged 3-7 cm in native secondary forests and 2-6 cm in Korean pine plantations in both spring and autumn.
Mt. Taehwa belongs to a broadleaved deciduous forest zone; however, most of the lower slopes are covered by Korean pine and Japanese larch (Larix kaempferi (Lamb.)Carrière) plantations.The Korean pine plantations in Mt.Taehwa occupied 136 ha and most of them were established in late 1960s.Because the Korean pine plantations were established in a relatively short period of time and distributed on lower slopes that had similar soil condition, they had a similar stand structure.Secondary natural stands, occupying 497 ha, were distributed on the upper slopes and ridges and were dominated by oaks, such as Mongolian oak, oriental cork oak, and oriental white oak (Quercus aliena Blume).
Three types of stands were selected: a secondary natural stand dominated by Mongolian oak (hereafter called oak stand), an adjacent Korean pine plantation (5.5 ha) established in 1969, and a Korean pine-Mongolian oak mixed stand (hereafter called mixed stand).The mixed stand was located between the oak stand and the Korean pine plantation and was established as a Korean pine plantation.However, Mongolian oak from the adjacent natural stands invaded the plantation and replaced part of the Korean pine.The Mongolian oak in the oak stand and the Korean pine in the Korean pine plantation occupied 79.1% and 97.6% of each stand's basal area, respectively.The respective basal areas within the mixed stand were 48.4% Korean pine and 39% Mongolian oak.All study sites were at an altitude of 229-285 m asl, and the slope steepness was 36-67%.The oak stand was on a NW slope and the mixed stand on a NE slope.The Korean pine plantation grew across different oriented slopes from 120-315°; however, it mostly faced south (Table 1).
In each type of stand, three 20 m × 20 m plots were randomly established.All trees ≥2.5 cm in diameter at breast height (DBH; 1.3 m above the ground) were measured within each 20 m × 20 m plot.For each tree, species names, DBH, tree condition (alive, dead, broken top, or leaning), crown width, and proportion of crown to tree height were recorded.

Soil Measurements, Sampling, and Analysis
A HOBO soil data logger (HOBO H21-002 Micro Station, On-set computer Corporation, USA) was installed in the center of each study site.The soil temperature (°C) and soil moisture content (m 3 m −3 ) were measured from 28 March 2010 to 31 March 2011 at 30-minute intervals at 10 cm soil depth.The daily mean soil temperature and daily mean soil water content were calculated.
Soil samples were collected from the soil surface to a depth of 10 cm with a soil sampling container (100 cm 3 ) from all the plots in March, June, and October 2010.At each plot, four sampling points were randomly selected 1.5-2 m from the base of a tree trunk to minimize the direct physical and chemical influences of roots [4].A total of 36 soil samples at a time were collected from the three stand types.The soils were oven-dried at 105 °C for 24 hours and the soil water content (%) was measured on a gravimetric basis.A particle-size analysis was conducted with the pipette method [24], and soil texture (standard of US Department of Agriculture) was determined.We measured soil organic matter contents by combusting it at 600 °C for 4 hours in a muffle furnace and weighing the residue [25].For chemical analyses, the sampled soils were air-dried and sieved (<2 mm).We measured soil pH (soil:water = 1:5), total nitrogen content (TN) [25], cation exchange capacity (CEC) [26], and total phosphorus (TP; inductively coupled plasma ICPS-1000IV, Shimazu, Japan).Available soil phosphorous (P2O5) was determined by analyzing the Bray No. 1 extracts with an ICP (inductively coupled plasma) optical emission spectrometer (ICP-730 ES, Varian, USA).We used an elemental analyzer to measure the C:N ratio (Flash EA 1112, Thermo Electron Corporation, USA).

Leaf litter Decomposition Experiment
Leaf litter fall of Mongolian oak and Korean pine (5-6 kg per each species) was collected from forest floor of the Mongolian oak stand and Korean pine plantation, respectively, in the study sites in March 2009.Our study focused on in-situ condition and year-round changes in leaf litter on the forest floor.Leaf litter fall of Mongolian oak occurred in autumn and Korean pine was a conifer with leaf litter fall distributed over the whole year, so we collected forest floor litter in March before active decomposition began instead of autumn to avoid the combination of very fresh Mongolian oak litter fall and relatively less fresh Korean pine litter fall.We were careful to collect intact leaves without clear sign of decomposition from the top layer.The leaf litter sample was oven-dried at 80 °C for 48 hours.The oven-dried leaf litter was weighed into 10 g samples and put into litterbags, either pure or in a 1:1 ratio of the two leaf litters by mass [27,28].Each litterbag was 20 cm × 10 cm and was made of nylon mesh (1 mm × 1.2 mm mesh size).
The litterbags were placed on topsoil parallel to the forest floor in each study plot in April 2009.A total of 972 litterbags were deployed at the study sites: 3 stand types × 3 plots at each stand type × 3 leaf litter types × 3 replicates × 12 retrieving dates from April 2009 to March 2011.Each litterbag was at least 15 cm away from other litterbags, and all litterbags at each site were tied together with a nylon string to minimize unnecessary movements.Every two months, 27 litterbags were retrieved from each study site.The retrieved leaf litter was oven-dried at 80 °C for 48 hours and brushed carefully to minimize soil contamination [29].Oven-dried litter was weighed to the nearest 0.01 g to determine its mass loss, and milled for chemical analyses [30].Total nitrogen and C concentrations (mg g −1 ) were measured using a dry combustion method with a C-N analyzer (Yanaco MT-500, Kyoto, Japan) [28].Total P in the leaf litter was determined with an automated ion analyzer (QuikChem AE, Lachat Inc., Loveland, Colorado, USA).The amount of nutrients in the leaf litter was calculated as follows: Where Nt is the amount of nutrient (g) at time t, Ct is the percent concentration of nutrient at time t, and Lt is the leaf litter remaining mass (g) at time t.

Data Analysis
The decomposition rate constant (k) was derived from the negative exponential decomposition equation proposed by Olson [31] as follows: Where X 0 is the initial mass, and X is the remaining mass at time t.
The predicted remaining mass for the mixed leaf litter was estimated using equation (3) based on the observed remaining mass of the single species to verify a mixed effect on leaf litter decomposition [29].The predicted results were compared with the observed remaining mass of the mixed leaf litter.
Where EML is the predicted remaining mass of mixed litter (%); S is the species; OMLi is the observed leaf litter mass of the single species (%); and PIMi is the initial proportion of species i.
When the observed remaining mass of mixed leaf litter is not significantly different from the predicted results, mixing has an additive effect; otherwise, it has a non-additive effect.The non-additive effect is differentiated into a synergistic effect (decomposition rates are more than predicted values) or an antagonistic effect (decomposition rates are less than predicted values) [16].The predicted and observed remaining mass were compared using a paired t-test to determine possible mixed leaf litter effects (i.e., additive or non-additive).
One-way ANOVA was used to compare the decomposition rate constant (k) and the changes in leaf litter N, P, and C concentrations among the three stand types.A simple linear regression was used to assess the relationship between mass loss (%) and total C in decomposing leaf litters.The relationship between the total N, P, and C in each leaf litter type over 24 months was estimated using polynomial regression analysis.
A repeated-measures ANOVA was used to compare the soil physical and chemical characteristics in different seasons (March, June, and October 2010) and identify whether significant differences occurred in mass loss and changes in leaf litter N and P every two months by leaf litter type in a single stand or among the stand types.Tukey's test was applied for post-hoc comparisons, with significance set at p < 0.05.The SPSS statistical package program Version 18.0 was used for all statistical analyses (SPSS Software 2009, IBM SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA).

Soil Characteristics
All study sites had similar soil temperatures.The maximum soil temperature reached at 24 °C in August, and it stayed near 0 °C in January and February (Figure 1).The Korean pine plantation had a daily mean soil moisture content lower than the other two stand types in June, October, and November (Figure 1), and soil moisture content measurements lower than the other two stand types in March and October 2010 (Table 2; p < 0.001).All study sites showed similar daily soil moisture content in the summer.
The three stand types showed significant differences in soil TN concentrations, which were highest in the oak stand and lowest in the Korean pine plantation in spring and autumn (p = 0.03).However, soil TN did not significantly differ among stand types in the summer.The oak stand had the highest organic matter content (19.7%) in March 2010 (p < 0.05), but we found no differences in organic matter content in the summer and autumn (Table 2).The soil P2O5 content was highest in the Korean pine plantation with 126.7 mg L −1 ; was more than twice the 49 mg L −1 observed in the oak stand in March 2010.The largest soil N:P ratio was therefore in the oak stand (Figure 2), which had the lowest soil P2O5 and substantial seasonal differences in soil P2O5 and soil N:P (p = 0.015) between March and October, 2010, though few seasonal changes in soil TN were observed.Due to the high variability of soil P2O5 within the stands, soil P2O5 contents among the stands were not significantly different.Soil pH, TP, and CEC were not significantly different among the stand types.

Leaf litter Decomposition and Mixed Leaf litter Effects
All leaf litter showed distinct seasonal changes in decomposition rates.About 20% of mass loss occurred in all study sites during the initial six months from April to October 2010 regardless of leaf litter type.Little change in the remaining mass was detected in the subsequent six months (during winter and spring).During the second summer, fourteen months after the experiment started, all types of leaf litter in each stand lost 14%-29% of the original mass (Figure 3).
The leaf litter decomposition rate in the oak stand was significantly slower than those in the Korean pine plantation and the mixed stand until the second summer (p < 0.001).The leaf litter decomposition rate was highest in the Korean pine plantation and lowest in the oak stand for 17 months.Although the leaf litter mass loss in the oak stand was less than that in the other stands prior to the second summer, the remaining leaf litter mass continuously decreased in the oak stand during the second autumn, whereas further decomposition did not progress in the other stands.
As a result, after 24 months the remaining leaf litter mass was similar among the stand types, ranging from approximately 41-47%.No significant difference was found in the decomposition rate among the leaf litter types in the same stand.Observed and predicted decay constants in each stand were not significantly different, indicating that the leaf litter mixing of Korean pine and Mongolian oak had an additive effect on leaf litter decomposition.We found no significant synergistic or antagonistic interactions between those two species in leaf litter decomposition over 24 months (Figure 4).

Leaf litter N, P, and C Changes and Relationships
Changes in the decomposition constant (k) for 24 months corresponded to changes in the amount of C in decomposing leaf litters, and those changes were highly correlated (p < 0.001; Table 3).The amount of leaf litter C decreased in a pattern similar to leaf litter mass loss (Figure 3).Consequently, the changes in leaf litter C mass did not vary among leaf litter types, but they were significantly different among stands: the oak stand retained significantly more leaf litter C than the other stands (p < 0.001).Percentage changes in leaf litter N and P showed that N and P were immobilized during the first year in all study sites.The immobilization was sustained until the beginning of the second summer, June 2010.Mineralization of N and P was observed after 14 months (Figure 5).The shift from N immobilization to N mineralization in the mixed stand and the Korean pine plantation occurred in the 16th month, June 2010, whereas the process of N immobilization in the oak stand was sustained until October 2010.Although the oak stand had a longer N immobilization phase, it showed a higher rate of N mineralization in the second autumn, and the percent of N remaining in the leaf litter in the oak stand was similar to that in the other stands in the 24th month.Changes in the percent of N remaining in the oak leaf litter was significantly different from that of Korean pine leaf litter in the oak stand (p < 0.05), but the other stands did not show significant differences in the percent of N remaining by leaf litter type (Figure 5A-C).Temporary leaching of P was shown at the beginning of the study, and then a process of P immobilization started within two months and continued until the 16th month in all study sites (Figure 5D-F).The highest P immobilization rate (175%) was observed in the oak leaf litter at the mixed stand (Figure 5E).The Korean pine leaf litter had the lowest P immobilization percentage in all stand types.Korean pine leaf litter showed the lowest percent of P remaining among leaf litter types in all study sites, indicating the greatest leaf litter P decomposition, and oak leaf litter showed the highest percent of P remaining (p < 0.05).Percent of P remaining in the leaf litter in the 24th month was 59-79% in the oak stand, 77-116% in the mixed stand, and 73-100% in the Korean pine plantation.The oak stand showed the greatest P mineralization among the stand types.The percent of P remaining in the Korean pine leaf litter was lower in the oak stand than in the other stands (p = 0.018).
The changes in leaf litter N and P had a polynomial correlation with leaf litter C (Figure 6, Table 4).The relationship among leaf litter N, P, and C differed among the leaf litter types.The leaf litter N amount relative to leaf litter C loss was significantly different in the order Korean pine leaf litter b < mixed leaf litter ab < Mongolian oak leaf litter a (Figure 6A-C; p < 0.001).The inflection points between N immobilization and mineralization differed by stand type (p < 0.05).The maximum amount of leaf litter N peaked when the total amount of C ranged from 5 g to 6 g, which was interpreted to be 50-60% of the initial leaf litter C amount, in the mixed stand and the Korean pine plantation (Figure 5B,C) and 4 g of C in the oak stand (Figure 6A).After 24 months of the experiment, leaf litter C:N ranged from 25 to 46.Leaf litter C:N was not significantly different among stand types, but differed among the leaf litter types as Korean pine leaf litter had significantly higher C:N than the other litter types (p < 0.001).
Korean pine leaf litter had the greatest leaf litter P content among leaf litter types.The amount of leaf litter P in the Mongolian oak leaf litter was significantly smaller than that in the mixed leaf litter and Korean pine leaf litter until the remaining C reached 4 g in all the stand types.The amount of leaf litter P became similar all leaf litter types in the mixed stand and the Korean pine plantation after remaining C was less than 4 g (Figure 6E,F).Similar amounts of C (4-5 g) were observed at the inflection point of P changes in all stand types (Figure 6D-F; p < 0.05).The Mongolian oak stand had significantly higher leaf litter C:P of 476 than the Korean pine plantation of 383 after 24 months (p = 0.019).The Mongolian oak stand had significantly higher leaf litter N:P of 14 than the other two sites of ca. 13 (p < 0.05).Three litter types showed significant difference in leaf litter N:P in 24 months in the order Korean pine leaf litter c < mixed leaf litter b < Mongolian oak leaf litter a (p < 0.05).

Seasonal Leaf litter Decomposition Patterns
Seasonal weather changes have a large effect on leaf litter breakdown in temperate deciduous forests, especially when abundant rainfall and high summer temperatures contribute to a substantial leaf litter mass loss [32].The majority of leaf litter decomposition in all study sites occurred from June to August, although the decomposition rates differed among the stand types.The seasonal effect on the decomposition rate of Quercus leaf litters in a temperate deciduous forest was also reported in Lee et al. [33]: the majority of leaf litter mass loss occurred in the summer, and little mass loss was detected from February to April.
In this study, the percent mass of the Korean pine leaf litter remaining after 24 months was 40-50%, which was similar to the 51.6% in 26 months reported in the Gwangneung Experimental Forest, in the same province as our study sites [30].On Mt.Gyebang, which is north of Mt.Taehwa and has lower temperatures, the percent mass of leaf litter remaining after 24 months was ca.52% [34].The percent average leaf litter mass remaining after 24 months was 55-60% for Korean pine leaf litter in Jilin Province, northeast China, which has a higher latitude than Mt.Taehwa [19].About 50% of the leaf litter was decomposed during the initial two years, and the decomposition rate lowered slightly as the latitude increased, showing that temperature was a determining factor for leaf litter decomposition rate: a hotter humid summer corresponds to faster leaf litter decomposition in temperate deciduous forests in NE Asia [35].
All study sites had the same soil texture (loam) and similar soil temperatures.Soil moisture contents were similar in the summer and different in spring and autumn.The oak stand and mixed stand were on a north slope, and the Korean pine plantation was mostly on a south slope, which explained why the lowest soil moisture content was found in the Korean pine plantation in the dry seasons of spring and autumn [36,37].Leaf litter decomposition rate generally increases with soil moisture content [38].However, our study sites had similar decomposition rates after 24 months, indicating that the soil moisture content in summer was the key determinant of leaf litter decomposition and confirming the importance of summer weather in leaf litter decomposition [39].

Mixed Leaf Litter Effect
The leaf litter decomposition rate of broadleaved species is generally higher than that of conifers [40,41].However, the decomposition rates of Mongolian oak leaves and Korean pine needles in the same stand were not different in this study.Mongolian oak leaves have thick hard blades and low nutrient content compared with other oak species, retarding the leaf litter decomposition rate [34] and contributing to the similar decomposition rates of the two species.
The mixed leaf litter of Korean pine and Mongolian oak showed no mixed litter effect on leaf litter decomposition, indicating that the interaction strength between the leaf litters of the two species was weak.The leaf litter decomposition rate of the mixed leaf litter could therefore be predicted from the decomposition rate of each individual species [15].Mixed leaf litter could have a higher decomposition rate than a single-species leaf litter because nutrient exchange among leaf litters of different species through microbes could enhance the nutrient condition of low-quality leaf litters, accelerating the decomposition rate [27,42].At the beginning, Mongolian oak leaves contained more N, and Korean pine needles had more P (Figure 6).We could observe more physical breakdown of the Mongolian oak leaf litter in the mixed leaf litter.However, contrary to our expectations that transport of nutrients between the Mongolian oak leaf litter and the Korean pine leaf litter would induce complementary interactions and a synergistic effect, an actual mixed effect on the remaining mass was not detected within 24 months, suggesting that synergistic effects of mixed leaf litters of contrasting qualities is questionable [29,43].Moreover, the seasonal climate was a primary control on the leaf litter decomposition pattern, making species difference less powerful in leaf litter decomposition in a temperate deciduous forest [44].However, the possibility that an additive effect is temporary and switches to a non-additive effect as decomposition progresses still exists because the non-additive effect of mixed leaf litters for mass loss could be time dependent [45].

Leaf Litter Nutrient Dynamics
After two years of experiments, only 10-20% of net N mineralization was detected due to the immobilization process in the initial decomposition period, which lasted longer than one year.Nutrients in decaying foliar leaf litter temporarily increase due to nutrient immobilization by microbes in the initial mass loss process.The leaf litter N and P immobilization phase prolonged more than 14 months in this study, which was similar to the N and P immobilization phase of more than 15 months in the foliar leaf litter decomposition of oak and Korean pine in a broadleaf-Korean pine mixed forest in NE China [19].
Different leaf litter types had a similar period for the immobilization and mineralization of N and P to diminishing C as well as similar leaf litter decomposition rates at the same stand.Net N mineralization rates of leaf litter are greatly influenced by the site conditions rather than leaf litter species, causing the same species to show different mineralization rates depending on the site [46].
Although soil N is an important determinant in leaf litter decay, soil P becomes a stronger control for leaf litter decay when it is limited under abundant soil N [47].Seasonal P dynamics are more variable than N in leaf litter decomposition [48].High precipitation in the summer promotes the movement of phosphate in the soil, inducing seasonal changes in the distribution of soil phosphate [33].Thus, the proportions of P with other nutrients, such as C:P and N:P, as well as the concentration of P itself, were major regulators that could inhibit or further decay rates by providing a balanced nutritional pool for decomposers [28,49].Seasonal changes in soil N:P in the oak stand were related to changes in available P content.The lowest soil P2O5 and spatial and seasonal variances of soil P2O5 (Table 2) and N:P (Figure 2) might contribute to a fluctuation of nutrient supply that could explain the lowest leaf litter decomposition rate prior to the second summer and the different patterns of immobilization and mineralization of N and P in the oak stand compared with the other stands.Therefore, leaf litter nutrient dynamics were more affected by site conditions than by leaf litter types, suggesting that leaf litter decomposition and leaf litter nutrient dynamics patterns between a secondary forest and an adjacent plantation would not be much different if the site condition and stand age were similar, due to the overwhelming seasonal climatic effect on leaf litter decomposition in temperate deciduous forests.
Oak leaf litter showed the smallest P content among leaf litter types, which might be related to the occurrence of least soil P2O5 in the oak stand.The Korean pine plantation had the lowest soil TP, but it had the highest soil P2O5 among the stand types, and the Korean pine leaf litter had the greatest leaf litter P content and mineralization rate, suggesting that after 40 years of occupation of a Korean pine plantation might increase soil P2O5 [50]. Lee et al. [33] reported that rapid P cycling in black locust communities resulted in increased membrane phosphate in soil compared with adjacent Mongolian oak communities.Although the effects of species composition might be less powerful than climate on leaf litter decomposition in temperate deciduous forests, effects of species change on detailed leaf litter decomposition process, such as leaf litter nutrient dynamics and soil nutrients, can be expected [10].We could suggest different leaf litter decomposition patterns relevant to leaf litter N and P dynamics and soil properties between the Korean pine plantation and the oak stand.We expect that further studies on decomposer communities would clarify the decomposition mechanism in temperate deciduous forests.

Conclusions
This study compared the leaf litter decomposition patterns and nutrient dynamics between a Korean pine plantation and an adjacent native Mongolian oak-dominant broadleaved temperate forest.Seasonal climate, especially hot and humid summer weather, was a more powerful determinant in leaf litter decomposition patterns than leaf litter types, resulting in no mixed leaf litter effect on leaf litter decomposition.However, we did find effects of the changes in dominant species on leaf litter nutrient dynamics and soil nutrients.The conversion of natural forests into plantations may have long-term effects on nutrients available in the soil, eventually modifying soil nutrient budgets.

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.Daily mean soil temperatures (St, °C) and daily mean soil water contents (Sw, m 3 m −3 ) of the Mongolian oak stand, the mixed stand, and the Korean pine plantation from 28 March 2010 to 31 March 2011.

Figure 2 .
Figure 2.Seasonal changes in the soil N:P ratio in soil (0-10 cm) at the study sites.Data are means ± SE (n = 9).Data in the same stand followed by the different letters are significantly different at p < 0.05 according to t-tests.

Figure 3 .
Figure 3. Percent remaining leaf litter mass for Mongolian oak leaf litter (black solid line), Korean pine leaf litter (gray solid line) and mixed leaf litter (dashed line) in (A) the oak stand, (B) the mixed stand, and (C) the Korean pine plantation.Data are means ± SE (n = 9).

Figure 4 .
Figure 4. Comparisons of predicted (white bars) and observed (grey bars) decay constant k at each site.Predicted values calculated from the corresponding monoculture litterbags (paired t-test).Data are means ± SE (n = 9).

Figure 5 .
Figure 5. Percent of original N ((A), (B) and (C)) and P ((D), (E) and (F)) remaining for Mongolian oak leaf litter (black solid line), Korean pine leaf litter (gray solid line) and mixed leaf litter (dashed line) during the decomposition in (A), (D) the oak stand, (B), (E) the mixed stand, and (C), (F) the Korean pine plantation after 24 months.Data are means ± SE (n = 9).

Figure 6 .
Figure 6.Changes in the total N ((A), (B), (C)) and P ((D), (E), (F)) relative to total C for Mongolian oak leaf litter, Korean pine leaf litter and mixed leaf litter in (A), (D) the oak stand, (B), (E) the mixed stand, and (C), (F) the Korean pine plantation.

Table 1 .
Selected characteristics of the three study sites in the Seoul National University Forest at Mt. Taehwa, Gyeonggi Province.

Table 2 .
Soil chemical characteristics of the three study sites in the Seoul National University Forest at Mt. Taehwa, Gyeonggi Province in March, June, and October 2010.
a Data in the same month followed by the same letter are not significantly different at p < 0.05 according to Tukey's multiple range tests; Values are means ± SE.

Table 3 .
Leaf litter decomposition constant (k) and C percentage after 24 months relative to the initial leaf litter C (n = 9), and R 2 -values of simple linear regression for the relationship between mass loss (%) and leaf litter C in the decomposing phase (p < 0.05).