Microorganisms mediate the decomposition of leaf-litter through the release of extracellular enzymes. The surfaces of decomposing
leaves are both chemically and physically heterogeneous, and spatial patterns in microbial enzyme activity on the litter surface
should provide insights into fine-scale patterns of leaf-litter decomposition.
Platanus occidentalis leaves were collected from the floodplain of a third-order stream in northern Mississippi, enclosed in individual litter
bags, and placed in the stream channel and in the floodplain. Replicate leaves were collected approximately monthly over a
9-month period and assayed for spatial variation in microbial extracellular enzyme activity and rates of organic matter (OM)
decomposition. Spatial variation in enzyme activity was measured by sampling 96 small discs (5-mm diameter) cut from each
leaf. Discs were assayed for the activity of enzymes involved in lignin (oxidative enzymes) and cellulose (β-glucosidase,
cellobiohydrolase) degradation. Rates of OM loss were greater in the stream than the floodplain. Activities of all enzymes
displayed high variability in both environments, with severalfold differences across individual leaves, and replicate leaves
varied greatly in their distribution of activities. Geostatistical analysis revealed no clear patterns in spatial distribution
of activity over time or among replicates, and replicate leaves were highly variable. These results show that fine-scale spatial
heterogeneity occurs on decomposing leaves, but the level of spatial variability varies among individual leaves at the measured
spatial scales. This study is the first to use geostatistical analyses to analyze landscape patterns of microbial activity
on decomposing leaf litter and in conjunction with studies of the microbial community composition and/or substrate characteristics,
should provide key insights into the function of these processes.