Effects of landuse and weathering on available nutrients in volcanic ash soils of Costa Rica: a comparative study

In the present study two soiltypes, a highly depleted, old soil and a young, fertile soil are compared under three landuse types. The focus of the study is soil moisture and its chemical composition. As a reference, soil sample analyses and mineralogical data are used. Due to a higher data resolution of the young soil sampling period, the young soil data are treated more extensively. In the weathering of the young soil under forest, NO3 and other organic acids were found to play a major role, even though average pH values were still high (about 5). Rain events triggered biomass decomposition to high levels within a day, reflecting the high activity of soil organisms. The conversion of forest to grassland on young soil was found to enhance the base saturation of the soil and lower the Ca/Mg ratio on the exchange complex and in soil moisture, indicating that a main after effect of logging on these soils is enhanced weathering. The main proton donor for this enhanced weathering (CO2) is thought to come from the decay of refractory forest remains and humic material in the soil. The conversion of grassland to plantation led to a lowered base saturation accompanied with extreme concentrations of nutrients in the soil moisture, reflection the ineffectiveness of used fertilisation techniques. In the old soil under forest, nutrient losses were, as expected, much lower than in the young soil. Seaspray was found to have a large influence on the old soil forest nutrient regime. The conversion to grassland on old soil resulted in a lowered base saturation, because the main nutrient holding compartment, the vegetation, (and its seaspray scavenging ability) was removed. Conversion to plantation led to a situation similar to that of the young soil plantation, along with a pronounced dryness.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 71418 Gerrits, S., CATIE - Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza Turrialba, Costa Rica autor/a 3977, Ministerio de Agricultura y Ganadería (MAG) San José, Costa Rica 13639, 2420 Agricultural University of Wageningen, Wageningen (Países Bajos)
Format: biblioteca
Language:| 0
Published: Turrialba, Costa Rica Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza (CATIE) 1997
Subjects:UTILIZACION DE LA TIERRA, METEORIZACION, TIPOS DE SUELOS, SUELO VOLCANICO, FERTILIDAD DEL SUELO, CONTENIDO DE AGUA EN EL SUELO, COSTA RICA,
Online Access:https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/1497
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Summary:In the present study two soiltypes, a highly depleted, old soil and a young, fertile soil are compared under three landuse types. The focus of the study is soil moisture and its chemical composition. As a reference, soil sample analyses and mineralogical data are used. Due to a higher data resolution of the young soil sampling period, the young soil data are treated more extensively. In the weathering of the young soil under forest, NO3 and other organic acids were found to play a major role, even though average pH values were still high (about 5). Rain events triggered biomass decomposition to high levels within a day, reflecting the high activity of soil organisms. The conversion of forest to grassland on young soil was found to enhance the base saturation of the soil and lower the Ca/Mg ratio on the exchange complex and in soil moisture, indicating that a main after effect of logging on these soils is enhanced weathering. The main proton donor for this enhanced weathering (CO2) is thought to come from the decay of refractory forest remains and humic material in the soil. The conversion of grassland to plantation led to a lowered base saturation accompanied with extreme concentrations of nutrients in the soil moisture, reflection the ineffectiveness of used fertilisation techniques. In the old soil under forest, nutrient losses were, as expected, much lower than in the young soil. Seaspray was found to have a large influence on the old soil forest nutrient regime. The conversion to grassland on old soil resulted in a lowered base saturation, because the main nutrient holding compartment, the vegetation, (and its seaspray scavenging ability) was removed. Conversion to plantation led to a situation similar to that of the young soil plantation, along with a pronounced dryness.