4.5 Article

Salt leaching leads to drier soils in disturbed semiarid woodlands of central Argentina

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 171, Issue 4, Pages 1003-1012

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-012-2457-y

Keywords

Chloride; Salt and water dynamics; Selective deforestation; Osmotic and matric potential; Woody vegetation

Categories

Funding

  1. ARIDNET National Science Foundation [0234186]
  2. Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI) [CRNII 2031]
  3. Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI, US-National Science Foundation) [GEO-0452325]
  4. International Development Research Center (IDRC, Canada) [106601-001]
  5. Universidad de Buenos Aires [UBACyT 20020100100736]
  6. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica de Argentina [PICT 1840/06]
  7. CONICET
  8. Division Of Environmental Biology
  9. Direct For Biological Sciences [0234186] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Disturbances in semiarid environments have revealed a strong connection between water, salt and vegetation dynamics highlighting how the alteration of water fluxes can drive salt redistribution process and long-term environmental degradation. Here, we explore to what extent the reciprocal effect, that of salt redistribution on water fluxes, may play a role in dictating environmental changes following disturbance in dry woodlands. We assessed salt and water dynamics comparing soil-solution electrical conductivity, chloride concentration, soil water content (SWC) and soil matric and osmotic water potential (I-m, I-os) between disturbed and undisturbed areas. A large pool of salts and chlorides present in undisturbed areas was absent in disturbed plots, suggesting deep leaching. Unexpectedly, this was associated with slight but consistently lower SWC in disturbed versus undisturbed situations during two growing seasons. The apparent paradox of increased leaching but diminishing SWC after disturbance can be explained by the effect of native salt lowering I-os enough to prevent full soil drying. Under disturbed conditions, the onset of deep drainage and salt leaching would raise I-os allowing a decline of I-m and SWC. Soil water storage seems to be modulated by the presence (under natural conditions) and partial leaching (following selective shrub disturbance) of large salt pools. This counterintuitive effect of disturbances may be important in semiarid regions where deep soil salt accumulation is a common feature. Our results highlight the importance of water-salt-vegetation coupling for the understanding and management of these systems.

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