Estimations of amounts of soil organic carbon and fine root carbon in land use and land cover classes, and soil types of Chiapas highlands, Mexico

Amounts of organic carbon in the mineral soil (SOC) and fine-root (<5 mm) carbon (RC) were quantified, when possible down to 1 m depth, in 150 soil profiles from 39 sites in the highlands of Chiapas, Mexico. The sampling sites were classified and grouped according to the following soil type: Leptosols, weathered soils (Ferralsols, Acrisols, Lixisols and Nitosols), Luvisols and Cambisols/Phaeozems. Likewise, they were classified in the following groups with respect to land use/land cover (LU/LC): oak-evergreen cloud forest, fragmented forest, pine and pine-oak forest, and open land (cultivated land and pasture). No clear influence of soil-type grouping on amounts of SOC was revealed, between soil-type groups (soil type). The weathered soils had higher amounts of SOC and RC in the upper 50 cm than the other soil types and the lowest amounts of SOC and RC in the 50-100 cm layers. The LU/LC groups showed marked differences in amounts of SOC. Open land had between 20 and 60% less soil carbon than the different types of forests. Oak-evergreen cloud forest had the largest amounts of SOC at all depths. The differences in amounts of carbon (SOC and RC) between oak-evergreen cloud forest and the other LU/LC classes were proportionally larger in the 50-100 cm layer. This suggests that the amounts of SOC in deep soil layers may be influenced by changes in LU/LC.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mendoza Vega, Jorge Doctor autor 2016, Karltun, Erik autor, Olsson, Mats autor/a
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Carbón vegetal, Suelos forestales, Uso de la tierra, Ecología forestal, Artfrosur,
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