INVESTIGADORES
JOBBAGY GAMPEL Esteban Gabriel
artículos
Título:
Changes in soil carbon and nitrogen with afforestation across gradients of precipitation and plantation age
Autor/es:
BERTHRONG, ST; PIÑEIRO G; JOBBAGY EG; JACKSON RB
Revista:
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Editorial:
ECOLOGICAL SOC AMER
Referencias:
Año: 2012 vol. 22 p. 76 - 86
ISSN:
1051-0761
Resumen:
Afforestation, the conversion of unforested lands to forests, is a tool for sequestering anthropogenic carbon dioxide into plant biomass. However, in addition to altering biomass, afforestation can have substantial effects on soil organic carbon (SOC) pools, some of which have much longer turnover times than plant biomass. An increasing body of evidence suggests that the effect of afforestation on SOC may depend on mean annual precipitation (MAP). The goal of this study was to test how labile and bulk pools of SOC and total soil nitrogen (TN) change with afforestation across a rainfall gradient of 600?1500 mm in the Rio de la Plata grasslands of Argentina and Uruguay. The sites were all former grasslands planted with Eucalyptus spp. Overall, we found that afforestation increased (up to 1012 kg Cha-1 yr-1 ) or decreased (as much as 1294 kg Cha-1 yr-1 ) SOC pools in this region and that these changes were significantly related to MAP. Drier sites gained, and wetter sites lost, SOC and TN (r2 =0.59, P=0.003; and r2 =0.57, P=0.004, respectively). Labile C and N in microbial biomass and extractable soil pools followed similar patterns to bulk SOC and TN. Interestingly, drier sites gained more SOC and TN as plantations aged, while losses reversed as plantations aged in wet sites, suggesting that plantation age in addition to precipitation is a critical driver of changes in soil organic matter with afforestation. This new evidence implies that longer intervals between harvests for plantations could improve SOC storage, ameliorating the negative trends found in humid sites. Our results suggest that the value of afforestation as a carbon sequestration tool should be considered in the context of precipitation and age of the forest stand.