Carbon Stocks and Soil Organic Matter Quality Under Different of Land Uses in the Maranhense Amazon

Reis, Victor Roberto Ribeiro and Deon, Diana Signor and Muniz, Luciano Cavalcante and Silva, Marlen Barros e and Rego, Carlos Augusto Rocha de Moraes and Garcia, Uelson Serra and Cantanhêde, Ilka South de Lima and Costa, Joaquim Bezerra (2018) Carbon Stocks and Soil Organic Matter Quality Under Different of Land Uses in the Maranhense Amazon. Journal of Agricultural Science, 10 (5). p. 329. ISSN 1916-9752

[thumbnail of 73470-278745-1-PB.pdf] Text
73470-278745-1-PB.pdf - Published Version

Download (1MB)

Abstract

In the face of the traditional model of succession of native environments in pastures or agricultural areas, followed by superpastejo and the concern with emissions of greenhouse gases in the Brazilian Amazon region, this work aims to determine the influence of different land uses on carbon sequestration and soil organic matter changes in the municipality of Pindaré-Mirim, in state of Maranhão. This study evaluated different uses of the soil: native forest; secondary vegetation (capoeira); degraded pasture and CLFI (Crop-Livestock-Forest Integration) system. The deformed and undisturbed samples were collected at depths: 0.00-0.10, 0.10-0.20, 0.20-0.30, 0.30-0.40, 0.40-0.60, 0.60-0.80 and 0.80-1.00 m. Soil densities were determined by the volumetric ring method, the carbon stocks by the carbon content in the soil evaluating the dry combustion, and the accumulated carbon stocks were calculated in 1.00 m. The physical fractions of the organic matter were determined by means of the granulometric method. At depth 0.0-0.10 m, the soil density in the native forest (1.17 g cm-3) was lower than the average of degraded pasture (1.40 g cm-3). There was no difference in the carbon content between all the land uses up to 0.40 m depth. The accumulated carbon stocks up to 1.00 m ranged from 49.52 Mg ha-1 to 64.41 Mg ha-1 and were higher in the native forest compared to capoeira and the ICLF system. In relation to the accumulated carbon stock, the native forest and degraded pasture were the ones that obtained the highest levels, followed by the capoeira and the CLFI system.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: European Repository > Agricultural and Food Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 16 May 2023 04:45
Last Modified: 17 Jan 2024 03:38
URI: http://go7publish.com/id/eprint/2270

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item