Soil organic carbon forms with different uses in the Department of Magdalena (Colombia)

Fractions of soil organic matter (SOM) labile and humified, can be affected by use and management practices, but the impact of these changes has not been evaluated in soils of tropical environments. The present study investigated the contents and some forms of soil organic carbon (SOC) in five warm tropical climate zones of the Department of Magdalena (Colombia), and the effect of the cropping practices on these forms of organic carbon in cultivated soils, associated with Coffee (Coffea arabica), Banana (Musa sp.), African palm (Elaeis guineensis), Aloe (Aloe vera) compared to natural forest soils. Significant differences (P < 0.05) were not found between zones neither between soil. The study areas had low average values of SOM and, the forest soils had higher contents of total carbon than cultivated soils. Forest soils had an total carbon accumulation average of 42.4 mg/ha at 20 cm, compared to 33.8 mg/ha in the cultivated soils, this equals to an average loss of 23% total C by the effect of crop management in these soils. Values of humified C (C extracted with sodium pyrophosphate), are very low in cultivated soils and almost zero in forest soils, but forest soils had a higher number of stable forms of C (Cnox). In the soil cultivated with bananas, Total Carbon corresponds to fully oxidized forms of C, however in the soil cultivated with African palm, C stable forms represented 83% of total carbon.

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Main Authors: Vásquez Polo, José Rafael, Macías Vázquez, Felipe, Menjivar Flores, Juan Carlos
Format: Digital revista
Language:spa
eng
Published: Universidad Nacional de Colombia - Sede Palmira 2011
Online Access:https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/acta_agronomica/article/view/28853
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institution UNAL
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country Colombia
countrycode CO
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databasecode rev-actaagronomica
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region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema Nacional de Bibliotecas de la UNAL
language spa
eng
format Digital
author Vásquez Polo, José Rafael
Macías Vázquez, Felipe
Menjivar Flores, Juan Carlos
spellingShingle Vásquez Polo, José Rafael
Macías Vázquez, Felipe
Menjivar Flores, Juan Carlos
Soil organic carbon forms with different uses in the Department of Magdalena (Colombia)
author_facet Vásquez Polo, José Rafael
Macías Vázquez, Felipe
Menjivar Flores, Juan Carlos
author_sort Vásquez Polo, José Rafael
title Soil organic carbon forms with different uses in the Department of Magdalena (Colombia)
title_short Soil organic carbon forms with different uses in the Department of Magdalena (Colombia)
title_full Soil organic carbon forms with different uses in the Department of Magdalena (Colombia)
title_fullStr Soil organic carbon forms with different uses in the Department of Magdalena (Colombia)
title_full_unstemmed Soil organic carbon forms with different uses in the Department of Magdalena (Colombia)
title_sort soil organic carbon forms with different uses in the department of magdalena (colombia)
description Fractions of soil organic matter (SOM) labile and humified, can be affected by use and management practices, but the impact of these changes has not been evaluated in soils of tropical environments. The present study investigated the contents and some forms of soil organic carbon (SOC) in five warm tropical climate zones of the Department of Magdalena (Colombia), and the effect of the cropping practices on these forms of organic carbon in cultivated soils, associated with Coffee (Coffea arabica), Banana (Musa sp.), African palm (Elaeis guineensis), Aloe (Aloe vera) compared to natural forest soils. Significant differences (P < 0.05) were not found between zones neither between soil. The study areas had low average values of SOM and, the forest soils had higher contents of total carbon than cultivated soils. Forest soils had an total carbon accumulation average of 42.4 mg/ha at 20 cm, compared to 33.8 mg/ha in the cultivated soils, this equals to an average loss of 23% total C by the effect of crop management in these soils. Values of humified C (C extracted with sodium pyrophosphate), are very low in cultivated soils and almost zero in forest soils, but forest soils had a higher number of stable forms of C (Cnox). In the soil cultivated with bananas, Total Carbon corresponds to fully oxidized forms of C, however in the soil cultivated with African palm, C stable forms represented 83% of total carbon.
publisher Universidad Nacional de Colombia - Sede Palmira
publishDate 2011
url https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/acta_agronomica/article/view/28853
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spelling oai:www.revistas.unal.edu.co:article-288532014-06-02T01:05:58Z Soil organic carbon forms with different uses in the Department of Magdalena (Colombia) Formas de carbono orgánico en suelos con diferentes usos en el departamento del Magdalena (Colombia) Vásquez Polo, José Rafael Macías Vázquez, Felipe Menjivar Flores, Juan Carlos Agricultural soils biogeochemical cycling Carbon Colombia humus Magdalena plant nutrition Carbono ciclo biogeoquímico Colombia humus Magdalena nutrición de plantas suelos agrícolas. Fractions of soil organic matter (SOM) labile and humified, can be affected by use and management practices, but the impact of these changes has not been evaluated in soils of tropical environments. The present study investigated the contents and some forms of soil organic carbon (SOC) in five warm tropical climate zones of the Department of Magdalena (Colombia), and the effect of the cropping practices on these forms of organic carbon in cultivated soils, associated with Coffee (Coffea arabica), Banana (Musa sp.), African palm (Elaeis guineensis), Aloe (Aloe vera) compared to natural forest soils. Significant differences (P < 0.05) were not found between zones neither between soil. The study areas had low average values of SOM and, the forest soils had higher contents of total carbon than cultivated soils. Forest soils had an total carbon accumulation average of 42.4 mg/ha at 20 cm, compared to 33.8 mg/ha in the cultivated soils, this equals to an average loss of 23% total C by the effect of crop management in these soils. Values of humified C (C extracted with sodium pyrophosphate), are very low in cultivated soils and almost zero in forest soils, but forest soils had a higher number of stable forms of C (Cnox). In the soil cultivated with bananas, Total Carbon corresponds to fully oxidized forms of C, however in the soil cultivated with African palm, C stable forms represented 83% of total carbon. Las fracciones de materia orgánica del suelo (MOS) lábiles y humificadas pueden ser afectadas por las prácticas de uso y manejo; sin embargo el impacto de estos cambios no se ha evaluado en suelos y ambientes tropicales. El presente estudio tuvo como objetivo evaluar los contenidos y algunas formas de carbono orgánico del suelo (COS) en cinco zonas de clima cálido tropical (0 - 1110 m.s.n.m.) del departamento del Magdalena (Colombia) y el efecto que sobre ellas han tenido las prácticas asociadas a suelos cultivados con café (Coffea arabica), banano (Musa sp.), palma africana (Elaeis guineensis) y sábila (Aloe vera), comparados con suelos de bosques naturales. No se encontraron diferencias (P < 0.05) tanto entre zonas como entre usos del suelo, se presentaron valores medios a bajos de MOS en las zonas de estudio y contenidos de carbono total (Ct) mayores en suelos de bosques que en suelos cultivados, así los suelos de bosques presentan una acumulación media de Ct de 42.4 mg/ha a 20 cm, frente a 33.8 mg/ha en los suelos cultivados, esto equivale a una pérdida media de Ct del 23% por efecto del manejo de los cultivos. En relación con el carbono extraíble con pirofosfato sódico altamente relacionado con las fracciones humificadas de la MOS (Cp) se observaron valores muy bajos en los suelos cultivados y casi nulos en suelos de bosques; sin embargo estos últimos presentan mayor contenido de formas de carbono no-oxidables o estables (Cnox) determinado por diferencia entre Ct - carbono oxidable (Cox). En el suelo cultivado con banano, el Ct corresponde en su totalidad a formas de Cox; mientras que en el suelo cultivado con palma africana las formas estables Cnox representaron 83% del carbono total. Universidad Nacional de Colombia - Sede Palmira 2011-10-01 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/msword application/pdf text/html application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/acta_agronomica/article/view/28853 Acta Agronómica; Vol. 60 No. 4 (2011); 369-379 Acta Agronómica; Vol. 60 Núm. 4 (2011); 369-379 Acta Agronómica; v. 60 n. 4 (2011); 369-379 2323-0118 0120-2812 spa eng https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/acta_agronomica/article/view/28853/29149 https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/acta_agronomica/article/view/28853/29150 https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/acta_agronomica/article/view/28853/29162 https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/acta_agronomica/article/view/28853/40349 Derechos de autor 2011 Acta Agronómica https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0