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SOIL DEGRADATION, THRESHOLDS AND DYNAMICS OF LONG-TERM CULTIVATION: FROM LANDSCAPE BIOGEOCHEMISTRY TO NANOSCALE BIOGEOCOMPLEXITY

Author
Kinyangi, James
Abstract
In degrading tropical soils, carbon and nutrient exports represent a significant modification to global biogeochemical cycles. We assessed soil C and nutrient losses on 122 cultivated agricultural fields from three 100-yr chronosequence sites in western Kenya. During cultivation, C stocks and soil nutrients (N, P, K Ca and Mg) were rapidly lost from the surface soil after 15-36 years of continuous cropping. A lag phase was expressed in the half life kinetics between C decline and Ca and Mg rates. For all sites, crop C4 ?C gains offset between 15 to 34 % of the C losses but more than two thirds of the native forest C3 ?C was lost during 100 years of cropping. Heavy-textured Nandi soils cascaded from high to medium and low C stocks and nutrient equilibria, while medium-textured Kakamega soil, which already had lower nutrient contents instead transitioned from medium to low equilibrium of C stocks. By separating three SOM pools assigned to distinct soil functions as indicators of thresholds, we determined that nearly all C (13.6-24.3 g kg-1) and N (1.5-3.1 g kg-1) contents in the unstable and stable aggregate pools was lost 15 to 36 years after forest conversion. Long-term changes in the unstable and stable aggregate pool were characterized by rapid initial losses that reached equilibrium, a wide C:N ratio (19.3 and 18.3 respectively) and little ?15N isotopic shift (<1.0 ?). In contrast, the stable organomineral pools constituted large C and N contents which sustained only gradual non-equilibrium decay behavior. This large pool had a narrow C:N ratio with a strong enrichment of ?15N (1.7 to 3.5?). Continuing C and N content decline at equilibrium were linear and the severe loss of stable aggregate C and N was an indicator of low stabilization of organic matter. The long-term cultivation loss of C and soil nutrients was therefore driven by land use changes from C and nutrient-rich tropical rain forest to low equilibria of C and nutrient-poor degraded soil
Sponsorship
Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Cornell University
Date Issued
2007-09-04Subject
soil degradation, organic matter, biogeochemistry, carbon, nitrogen, equilibrium dynamics, nanoscale biogeocomplexity
Type
dissertation or thesis