| タイトル | Surface Soil Changes Following Selective Logging in an Eastern Amazon Forest |
| 著者(英) | Olander, Lydia P.; Bustamante, Mercedes M.; Telles, Everaldo; Asner, Gregory P.; Camargo, Plinio B.; Prado, Zayra |
| 著者所属(英) | Carnegie Institution of Washington |
| 発行日 | 2005-01-01 2005 |
| 言語 | eng |
| 内容記述 | In the Brazilian Amazon, selective logging is second only to forest conversion in its extent. Conversion to pasture or agriculture tends to reduce soil nutrients and site productivity over time unless fertilizers are added. Logging removes nutrients in bole wood, enough that repeated logging could deplete essential nutrients over time. After a single logging event, nutrient losses are likely to be too small to observe in the large soil nutrient pools, but disturbances associated with logging also alter soil properties. Selective logging, particularly reduced-impact logging, results in consistent patterns of disturbance that may be associated with particular changes in soil properties. Soil bulk density, pH, carbon (C), nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg), potassium (K), iron (Fe), aluminum (Al), delta(sup 3)C, delta(sup 15)N, and P fractionations were measured on the soils of four different types of loggingrelated disturbances: roads, decks, skids, and treefall gaps. Litter biomass and percent bare ground were also determined in these areas. To evaluate the importance of fresh foliage inputs from downed tree crowns in treefall gaps, foliar nutrients for mature forest trees were also determined and compared to that of fresh litterfall. The immediate impacts of logging on soil properties and how these might link to the longer-term estimated nutrient losses and the observed changes in soils were studied. |
| NASA分類 | Geophysics |
| レポートNO | Paper-9-004 |
| 権利 | Copyright |
|