Quantification of organic carbon and primary nutrients in litter and soil in a foothill forest plantation of eastern Himalaya

被引:9
作者
Shukla, Gopal [1 ]
Pala, Nazir A. [1 ]
Chakravarty, Sumit [1 ]
机构
[1] Uttar Banga Krishi Viswavidyalaya, Dept Forestry, Cooch Behar 736165, W Bengal, India
关键词
Litter production; Decomposition; Organic carbon; Material turnover; Eastern Himalayas; NITROGEN AVAILABILITY; MATTER; DECOMPOSITION; DYNAMICS; ECOSYSTEMS; QUALITY; STORAGE; CANOPY; IMPACT; JAPAN;
D O I
10.1007/s11676-017-0394-7
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
The present study was an effort to understand the amount of litter fall and its subsequent decomposition and quantify the release of available nutrients and soil physicochemical characteristics in plantations of four forest tree species (Lagerstroemia parviflora, Tectona grandis, Shorea robusta and Michelia champaca) in the Chilapatta Reserve Forest of the Cooch Behar Wildlife Division in the Terai zone of West Bengal, India. The most litter (5.61 Mg ha(-1)) was produced by T. grandis plantation and the least (4.72 Mg ha(-1)) by L. parviflora. The material turnover rate to the soil through decomposition from total litter was fastest during the first quarter of the year and subsequently decreased during the next two quarters. The material turnover rate was only 1 year, which indicates that more than 90% of the total litter produced decomposed within a year. The available primary nutrient content in litter varied across the four plantations over the year. The plantations generally did not significantly influence the soil physical characteristics but did significantly influence the availability of primary nutrients and organic carbon at two depths (1-15 and 16-30 cm) over the year. The availability of soil primary nutrients in the four plantations also increased gradually from the first quarter of the year to the third quarter and then decreased during the last quarter to the same level as in the first quarter of the year at both depths. The availability for soil organic carbon in the plantations followed a similar trend. The amount of litter produced and the material turnover in the soil in the different plantations differed, influencing the nutrient availability and organic carbon at the plantations. The amount of soil organic carbon was highest for T. grandis (2.52 Mg ha(-1)) and lowest for L. parviflora (2.12 Mg ha(-1)). Litter is the source of soil organic matter, and more the litter that is produced by the plantations, the higher will be the content and amount of soil organic carbon in the plantation.
引用
收藏
页码:1195 / 1202
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Contributions of organic matter and nutrients via leaf litter in an urban tropical dry forest fragment
    Castellanos-Barliza, Jeiner
    Diego Leon-Pelaez, Juan
    Armenta-Martinez, Rosalba
    Barranco-Perez, Willinton
    Caicedo-Ruiz, William
    REVISTA DE BIOLOGIA TROPICAL, 2018, 66 (02) : 571 - 585
  • [32] Mitigation of soil organic carbon mineralization in tea plantations through replacement of pruning litter additions with pruning litter derived biochar and organic fertilizer
    Zhang, Shaobo
    Huang, Fuyin
    Guo, Shuai
    Luo, Ying
    Zhang, Liping
    Zhang, Lan
    Li, Zhenzheng
    Ge, Shibei
    Wang, Huasen
    Fu, Jianyu
    Li, Xin
    Yan, Peng
    INDUSTRIAL CROPS AND PRODUCTS, 2025, 225
  • [33] 13C Labelling of Litter Added to Tea (Camellia sinensis L.) Plantation Soil Reveals a Significant Positive Priming Effect That Leads to Less Soil Organic Carbon Accumulation
    Yang, Xiangde
    Ni, Kang
    Ma, Lifeng
    Shi, Yuanzhi
    Yi, Xiaoyun
    Ji, Lingfei
    Ruan, Jianyun
    AGRONOMY-BASEL, 2022, 12 (02):
  • [34] Litter degradation and soil carbon fractions in a tropical mountain cloud forest, Western Ghats, India
    Vijayan, Aswathy K.
    Balachandran, Balu
    Sasi, S. Arun
    Mohan, Mahesh
    TROPICAL ECOLOGY, 2018, 59 (03) : 515 - 524
  • [35] Microscale spatiotemporal patterns of water, soil organic carbon, and enzymes in plant litter detritusphere
    Kim, Kyungmin
    Kaestner, Anders
    Lucas, Maik
    Kravchenko, Alexandra N.
    GEODERMA, 2023, 438
  • [36] Conversion of grazing land into Grevillea robusta plantation and exclosure: impacts on soil nutrients and soil organic carbon
    Alem, Shiferaw
    Pavlis, Jindrich
    ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT, 2014, 186 (07) : 4331 - 4341
  • [37] Comparing soil organic carbon dynamics in plantation and secondary forest in wet tropics in Puerto Rico
    Li, Y
    Xu, M
    Zou, XM
    Shi, PJ
    Zhang, YQ
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2005, 11 (02) : 239 - 248
  • [38] Stocks of soil organic carbon in forest ecosystems of the Eastern Usambara Mountains, Tanzania
    Kirsten, Maximilian
    Kaaya, Abel
    Klinger, Thomas
    Feger, Karl-Heinz
    CATENA, 2016, 137 : 651 - 659
  • [39] Earthworms, litter and soil carbon in a northern hardwood forest
    Timothy J. Fahey
    Joseph B. Yavitt
    Ruth E. Sherman
    John C. Maerz
    Peter M. Groffman
    Melany C. Fisk
    Patrick J. Bohlen
    Biogeochemistry, 2013, 114 : 269 - 280
  • [40] Loss of soil microbial residue carbon by converting a tropical forest to tea plantation
    Ma, Suhui
    Zhu, Biao
    Chen, Guoping
    Ni, Xiaofeng
    Zhou, Luhong
    Su, Haojie
    Cai, Qiong
    Chen, Xiao
    Zhu, Jiangling
    Ji, Chengjun
    Li, Yide
    Fang, Jingyun
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 818