Plant-soil interactions in degraded and remediated soils

Increasing soil quality and C sequestration in degraded terrestrial ecosystems is one of the main current environmental challenges in the Mediterranean area. Plant species differ in their mechanisms of C-fixation, C allocation into different plant organs, and interaction with soil microorganisms, all these factors influencing the dynamics of soil functioning following the afforestation of degraded soils. In this presentation we summarize the results from different experiments aimed to study the influence of woody plant species on soil properties and functioning in degraded and remediated Mediterranean soils from SW Spain (Guadiamar Green Corridor, Seville). In a threeyear field experiment we tested whether the facilitation of the establishment of holm oak seedlings under the cover of pre-existing shrubs was mediated by improvements in soil quality and microbial activity. The facilitation of oak survival was mainly due to the improvement of light and temperature conditions, and not related to increases in microbial activity (soil extracellular enzymes) in the soils underneath shrubs. In another study we analyzed the effects of four afforested species on different soil C fractions, soil nutrient availability, microbial activity and soil CO2 fluxes 15 years after being planted in the remediated soils from former agricultural lands. The influence of the planted species was more pronounced in the more acidic and nutrient-poor soils. Changes in total soil C stocks after the afforestation of the soils were hardly detectable at that time-scale, although more dynamic variables (microbial biomass, CO2 fluxes) were influenced by the plant species.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Domínguez, María Teresa, Murillo Carpio, José Manuel, Navarro-Fernández, Carmen M., Madejón, Engracia, Madejón, Paula, Marañón, Teodoro
Format: comunicación de congreso biblioteca
Published: Universidade de Coimbra 2015-06-16
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/133054
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-irnas-es-10261-133054
record_format koha
spelling dig-irnas-es-10261-1330542018-09-13T07:21:37Z Plant-soil interactions in degraded and remediated soils Domínguez, María Teresa Murillo Carpio, José Manuel Navarro-Fernández, Carmen M. Madejón, Engracia Madejón, Paula Marañón, Teodoro Increasing soil quality and C sequestration in degraded terrestrial ecosystems is one of the main current environmental challenges in the Mediterranean area. Plant species differ in their mechanisms of C-fixation, C allocation into different plant organs, and interaction with soil microorganisms, all these factors influencing the dynamics of soil functioning following the afforestation of degraded soils. In this presentation we summarize the results from different experiments aimed to study the influence of woody plant species on soil properties and functioning in degraded and remediated Mediterranean soils from SW Spain (Guadiamar Green Corridor, Seville). In a threeyear field experiment we tested whether the facilitation of the establishment of holm oak seedlings under the cover of pre-existing shrubs was mediated by improvements in soil quality and microbial activity. The facilitation of oak survival was mainly due to the improvement of light and temperature conditions, and not related to increases in microbial activity (soil extracellular enzymes) in the soils underneath shrubs. In another study we analyzed the effects of four afforested species on different soil C fractions, soil nutrient availability, microbial activity and soil CO2 fluxes 15 years after being planted in the remediated soils from former agricultural lands. The influence of the planted species was more pronounced in the more acidic and nutrient-poor soils. Changes in total soil C stocks after the afforestation of the soils were hardly detectable at that time-scale, although more dynamic variables (microbial biomass, CO2 fluxes) were influenced by the plant species. Peer Reviewed 2016-06-06T11:47:34Z 2016-06-06T11:47:34Z 2015-06-16 2016-06-06T11:47:35Z comunicación de congreso http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794 4º Congreso Ibérico de Ecología (Coimbra, Portugal). Junio 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10261/133054 Sí none Universidade de Coimbra
institution IRNAS ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-irnas-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IRNAS España
description Increasing soil quality and C sequestration in degraded terrestrial ecosystems is one of the main current environmental challenges in the Mediterranean area. Plant species differ in their mechanisms of C-fixation, C allocation into different plant organs, and interaction with soil microorganisms, all these factors influencing the dynamics of soil functioning following the afforestation of degraded soils. In this presentation we summarize the results from different experiments aimed to study the influence of woody plant species on soil properties and functioning in degraded and remediated Mediterranean soils from SW Spain (Guadiamar Green Corridor, Seville). In a threeyear field experiment we tested whether the facilitation of the establishment of holm oak seedlings under the cover of pre-existing shrubs was mediated by improvements in soil quality and microbial activity. The facilitation of oak survival was mainly due to the improvement of light and temperature conditions, and not related to increases in microbial activity (soil extracellular enzymes) in the soils underneath shrubs. In another study we analyzed the effects of four afforested species on different soil C fractions, soil nutrient availability, microbial activity and soil CO2 fluxes 15 years after being planted in the remediated soils from former agricultural lands. The influence of the planted species was more pronounced in the more acidic and nutrient-poor soils. Changes in total soil C stocks after the afforestation of the soils were hardly detectable at that time-scale, although more dynamic variables (microbial biomass, CO2 fluxes) were influenced by the plant species.
format comunicación de congreso
author Domínguez, María Teresa
Murillo Carpio, José Manuel
Navarro-Fernández, Carmen M.
Madejón, Engracia
Madejón, Paula
Marañón, Teodoro
spellingShingle Domínguez, María Teresa
Murillo Carpio, José Manuel
Navarro-Fernández, Carmen M.
Madejón, Engracia
Madejón, Paula
Marañón, Teodoro
Plant-soil interactions in degraded and remediated soils
author_facet Domínguez, María Teresa
Murillo Carpio, José Manuel
Navarro-Fernández, Carmen M.
Madejón, Engracia
Madejón, Paula
Marañón, Teodoro
author_sort Domínguez, María Teresa
title Plant-soil interactions in degraded and remediated soils
title_short Plant-soil interactions in degraded and remediated soils
title_full Plant-soil interactions in degraded and remediated soils
title_fullStr Plant-soil interactions in degraded and remediated soils
title_full_unstemmed Plant-soil interactions in degraded and remediated soils
title_sort plant-soil interactions in degraded and remediated soils
publisher Universidade de Coimbra
publishDate 2015-06-16
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/133054
work_keys_str_mv AT dominguezmariateresa plantsoilinteractionsindegradedandremediatedsoils
AT murillocarpiojosemanuel plantsoilinteractionsindegradedandremediatedsoils
AT navarrofernandezcarmenm plantsoilinteractionsindegradedandremediatedsoils
AT madejonengracia plantsoilinteractionsindegradedandremediatedsoils
AT madejonpaula plantsoilinteractionsindegradedandremediatedsoils
AT maranonteodoro plantsoilinteractionsindegradedandremediatedsoils
_version_ 1777664858140966912