4.7 Article

Patterns of soil organic carbon and nitrogen in relation to soil movement under different land uses in mountain fields (South Central Pyrenees)

Journal

CATENA
Volume 94, Issue -, Pages 43-52

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2011.05.012

Keywords

SOC; SON; Soil redistribution; Nutrient sources and sinks; Cs-137; Cultivated and abandoned fields

Funding

  1. CICYT [CGL2008-0831]

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Cultivation on mountain landscapes has been identified as a main factor triggering soil erosion. Patterns of erosion, transport and deposition of soil particles in agricultural landscapes appears to be closely linked to that of soil nutrients. In this work the redistribution of soil organic carbon and nitrogen and of soil particles is analysed in different geomorphic parts of mountain fields. A southern orientated hillslope was selected as representative of main land uses in mountain farmland of the Central Spanish Pyrenees. In the region, as much as 74% of its surface was abandoned in the last decades and as a result patterns of soil and nutrient losses in the fields were affected by both land abandonment and tillage. A set of cultivated and abandoned fields with different ages of land abandonment, slope gradients and lengths were selected to conduct this study. In each of the fields, total soil depth sampling was done in different parts of the slope to assess the pattern distribution of soil organic carbon (SOC) and nitrogen (SON). Other general soil properties analysed: pH, EC, carbonate content, grain size distribution and additional information derived from fallout caesium 137 provided supplementary information for better understanding the patterns of soil and nutrient redistribution. In the cultivated fields SOC and SON contents were higher and comparable to contents in the older abandoned fields, because the recovery of the natural vegetation after a long-term period of abandonment equalized the nutrient conditions in the cultivated fields that had regular additions of manure. In general SOC and SON percentages increased from the upper slope to the bottom slope of the fields with percentage increases ranging from 4 to 54% and from 1.5% to as much as 77%, respectively. Similarly, significant increases of SOC and SON inventories (45 and 49%, respectively) were registered at the bottom slopes of longer fields by comparison with lower increases (33 and 30%, respectively) in shorter and steeper fields. Soil deposition at the bottom slope as indicated by the Cs-137 residuals was paralleled with increases in SOC and SON contents: Under the land use practices in the studied fields the bottom slope positions accumulate soil particles and act as sinks of soil carbon and nitrogen in these mountain agricultural landscapes. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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