4.0 Article

Root biomass and carbon in a tropical evergreen forest of Mexico:: changes with secondary succession and forest conversion to pasture

Journal

JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue -, Pages 457-464

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0266467403003493

Keywords

land use change; Los Tuxtlas; Mexico; pasture; root biomass; root carbon; secondary forest; tropical forest

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Conversion of tropical evergreen forests to crops or pastures results in significant depletions of terrestrial carbon (C) pools. Root biomass and root C pools were quantified in tropical evergreen primary forest, and in secondary forests and pastures of different ages, in the Los Tuxtlas Region, Veracruz, Mexico. Total root biomass to 1-m depth ranged from 19 to 27 Mg ha(-1) in primary forest, from 5.5 to 22.5 Mg ha(-1) in secondary forests (8-, 20- and 30-y-old), and from 3.1 to 5.4 Mg ha(-1) in pastures (12-, 20- and 28-y-old). Large roots (> 20 mm in diameter) were largely absent below 40 cm depth in secondary forests and pastures. Roots in the 0-40 cm soil depth represented 60-76% of the total root biomass in primary forest, 77-93% in secondary forests, and 89-96% in pastures. Root biomass comprised 4.7-6.2% of the total biomass in primary forests and between 6.8-8.5% in secondary forests. These low values, the relatively hi.-h concentration of roots in the top 40 cm of soil, and the shallow depth at which large roots occurred in secondary forests suggest forest susceptibility to natural disturbances. Root C pools ranged from 7.9 to 11.6 Mg ha(-1) in primary forests. from 2.1 to 9.6 Mg ha(-1) in secondary forests and from 1.0 to 1.9 Mg ha(-1) in pastures. The estimated total ecosystem C pool in primary forest was 415 Mg ha(-1), it ranged from 187-246 Mg ha(-1) in secondary forests, and was 179 Mg ha(-1) in pastures. Tropical forest conversion to pasture decreased the root C pool by nearly 80% and represented a 94% loss of C in ecosystem biomass. Absolute losses of root C were nevertheless small when compared with the above-L,round C loss. Carbon distribution among ecosystem biomass components is key to adequately understanding the consequences of land-use/cover change on C dynamics in tropical regions.

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