Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9490039 CATENA 2005 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
A field survey of an evergreen Mediterranean woodland area in NE Spain on three silica-rich parent materials (granite, granodiorite and schist) was used to test whether parent material had a separate effect on ecosystem functioning in addition to aspect and position on the slope. As expected, vegetation was taller and denser on north-facing slopes and/or lower slope positions. However, parent material appeared to have additional effects, with significant increases in tree height, tree cover, shrub height and ratio of woodland to maquis vegetation from granite towards granodiorite and schist. There was also a parallel increase in mull humus forms, indicating increasing litter breakdown. The lower productivity on granite may be partly attributed to drought stress, as indicated by the greater proportion of shallow soils and the sandy to loamy sand texture. However, nutrient stress may be equally important. Plant N/P ratios were significantly greater on granite, and plant and soil P contents were less than on the other parent materials, suggesting that P-availability was limited on granite. The greater productivity of soils on schist than on granodiorite may reflect less severe drought stress because of their finer texture. These results suggest that parent material is an important factor regulating productivity in Mediterranean ecosystems through varying drought stress and availability of nutrients.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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