4.7 Article

Lost forever? Ecosystem functional changes occurring after agricultural abandonment and forest recovery in the semiarid Chaco

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 650, Issue -, Pages 1537-1546

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.09.001

Keywords

Remnant forest; Secondary forest; Crops; Fraction of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation; Remote sensing

Funding

  1. CONICET [UBACYT 20020110100156, PICTO-2014-0097, PICT 1082]
  2. Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI) - US National Science Foundation [CRN III 3095, GEO-1128040]

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Semiarid forests are worldwide threatened by land use changes, particularly agriculture. However, in some cases, due to particular economic or social processes, agriculture ends and forests may or may not recover to their original stale. Using different databases and satellite images integrated into a geographical information system, we located in the central region of the semiarid Chaco forests of Argentina adjacent land use patches of secondary forest (SF), remnant forest (RF) and crops (CP). Using a chronosequence approach, we evaluated changes in the fraction of the photosynthetic active radiation absorbed by the vegetation (FAPAR) between SF and RI and CP, using the enhanced vegetation index (EVI). We evaluated both infra and inter-annual changes in EVI mean (EVImean) EVI maximum (EVImax) EVI minimum (EVImin), and EVI relative range (EVIrr) as descriptors of FAPAR dynamics and analyzed their changes through time (2000 W 2010) and their relation W rainfall. Secondary forests showed higher seasonality and higher EVI,- ea values than RF, but differences disappeared as time since agricultural abandonment increased, suggesting that SF recover theft functioning (when compared to RF) after 10 to 15 years. Our results suggest that Chaco's SF have intermediate seasonal patterns in-between RF and CP, as expected by successional theory, and that FAPAR interception by RF appears to be dependent on previous year's precipitation. We found that, although all land uses showed similar precipitation use efficiency (PUE), SF and cropland's productivity were less stable across the years and showed faster increases or decreases compared to RF, depending on precipitation (higher precipitation marginal response- PMR). Our results suggest that at least some aspects of ecosystem functioning can be restored after agricultural abandonment. Future research that combines floristic and structural changes is necessary to fully understand secondary forests regrowth process after agricultural abandonment in the Chaco region. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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