Decrease in carbon stocks in an oxisol due to land use and cover change in southwestern Amazon (doi:10.4136/ambi-agua.86)

  • Cleber Ibraim Salimon Universidade Federal do Acre
  • Paulo Guilherme Salvador Wadt EMBRAPA
  • Suhelen de Souza Alves Universidade Federal do Acre
Palabras clave: soil carbon, Amazon, land cover change, climatic change

Resumen

This study presents data on the influence of the land cover type on soil carbon stocks in an Oxisol in southwestern Amazon, Acre, Brazil, under three land cover types: mature forest, pasture and rubber tree plantation. Total soil carbon was calculated using carbon concentration in soil and soil bulk density. Accumulated soil carbon stock up to 1 m depth was greater in mature forest (96 Mg ha-1), followed by pasture (79.7 Mg ha-1) and then by rubber tree plantation (56.3 Mg ha-1); also the greatest carbon accumulation in the surface layers was in pasture. Such results demonstrate that we need not only carbon stocks information by soil type, but also precise information on the land cover classification within a region in order to generate better soil carbon stocks estimations. Also, it is important to notice that mature forest conversion to other land covers can be the source to the atmosphere of about 20 to 40% of the carbon stocked in the soil previously.

Biografía del autor/a

Cleber Ibraim Salimon, Universidade Federal do Acre
Centro de Ciências Biológicas e da Natureza, Ecologia de Ecossistemas
Paulo Guilherme Salvador Wadt, EMBRAPA
EMBRAPA/AC, física de solos
Suhelen de Souza Alves, Universidade Federal do Acre
aluna de graduação de Engenharia Agronômica/UFAC
Publicado
28/08/2009
Sección
Articulos