INVESTIGADORES
DIAZ ZORITA Martin
capítulos de libros
Título:
Soils of the Pampas
Autor/es:
DÍAZ-ZORITA, MARTÍN; BUSCHIAZZO, DANIEL E
Libro:
Encyclopedia of Soil Science
Editorial:
Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
Referencias:
Lugar: New York, NY; Año: 2006; p. 1653 - 1657
Resumen:
The Pampas region is a vast plain of approximately 52Mha located along the central part of Argentina. It is an extension of a bigger plain wedged between the Andes in the West and the Guyana–Brazilian shield in the East including the Venezuelan llanos, the Amazonian lowlands, and the Chaco-Pampas region. According to rainfall and soil quality patterns,[1] the Pampas can be divided into five subregions: Rolling Pampas, Inland or Central Pampas, Southern Pampas, Flooded Pampas, and Mesopotamian Pampas (Fig. 1). The climate is warm temperate with adequate to less than adequate rainfall for normal crop production. The mean temperature is 18_C and 14_C in the North and the South of the Pampas, respectively.[2] In part of the region, the temperature and the frost-free period are adequate for growing double crops (i.e., soybean or maize planted after wheat). Rainfall amounts show high inter-annual variability. Most rainfall occurs between October and April (spring to fall seasons), and the long-term annual average is 500 and 1000mm in the South-West and in the North-East of the region, respectively.[2] Although, there has been an increase in precipitation in the last 20 years, at the rate of 100mm per year,[3] the water balance during the summer is still negative with long periods of droughts of 2–6 weeks. Most of the region was originally covered by grasslands, interrupted only by gallery forests along the margins of the Parana´, Uruguay, and La Plata rivers. At present, most of the region is under agricultural land use and, excluding the flooded Pampas, covers approximately 34Mha. Almost 60% of the agricultural area is covered by perennial pastures comprising alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.), fescue (Festuca arundinacea L.), and other grasses under direct grazing livestock systems. The rest of the area is involved in the annual crop production, comprising 10Mha of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merrill], 2.4Mha of maize (Zea mays L.), 6.3Mha of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), 1.8Mha of sunflower (Helianthus annus L.), and other crops.[4] In the rolling Pampas and in the eastern parts of the inland Pampas, almost 100% of the area falls under the annual crop sequences while the proportion of area covered by pastures increases toward the boundaries of the Pampas. The flooded Pampas is mostly under native grasslands for cattle production systems