Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4383095 | Applied Soil Ecology | 2009 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Temperate forests dominated by Quercus spp. cover large parts of Central Mexico and rural communities depend on these forests for wood and charcoal. The impacts of charcoal production on selected chemical properties including C and N dynamics, and populations of ammonifiers, nitrifiers and denitrifiers were investigated on surface soils (0-15Â cm) collected during the dry and rainy season of these forests. Organic C was halved in soil at the kiln sites compared to undisturbed forest soil. Concentrations of exchangeable Ca2+, K+ and Mg2+ increased >1.6 times at kiln sites and pH increased from 4.5 in undisturbed soil to 7.0 at kiln sites. The kiln sites had 1.3 times and 2.4 times lower microbial biomass C and N, respectively, than undisturbed forest sites during the rainy season. Although the effect of charcoal production on NH4+, NO2â and NO3â concentrations was small, the ammonifying, nitrifying and denitrifiers were 16 times lower at the kiln sites than in the undisturbed forest soil. This research found that the charcoal production had a negative effect on the cultivable microorganisms involved in N cycling and the soil microbial biomass C and N compared to undisturbed forest soil. Differences in inorganic N dynamics were more affected by seasonality, i.e. precipitation, than by charcoal production.
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Authors
Blanca Estela Gómez-Luna, Ma. Cruz Rivera-Mosqueda, Luc Dendooven, Gerardo Vázquez-Marrufo, VÃctor Olalde-Portugal,