AGGREGATE STABILITY OF SOILS IN CENTRAL SPAIN AND THE ROLE OF LAND MANAGEMENT
โ Scribed by TERNAN, J. L.; ELMES, A.; WILLIAMS, A. G.; HARTLEY, R.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 952 KB
- Volume
- 21
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0360-1269
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โฆ Synopsis
The paper examines the relationships between soil aggregate stability, selected soil properties and land use in central Spain.
Aggregate stability indices derived from three procedures were found to be significantly (p > 0.01) correlated with each other as well as with clay content, organic carbon and a range of water-soluble salts. Soils with a higher clay content have a lower aggregate stability. It appears that the presence of expandable clays has a major negative influence, although this impact is strongly modified by recent land-use history and contemporary land-management practices. Agricultural land, abandoned in the 1940s, was subsequently invaded by Cistus matorral or planted with Pinus. The most stable aggregates occur under matorral and may represent a lag of more resistant aggregates surviving past land-use-related erosional processes. Comparisons with aggregates under Pinus however suggest that hydrophobic substances from the Cistus may have increased aggregate stability. Aggregates from areas remaining in cultivation are the least resistant although the stability envelope overlaps with areas under Pinus. These differences may be related to cultivation practices whereby clay-rich subsurface horizons characterized by higher proportions of expandable clays are drawn to the surface, and to enhancement of aggregate stability under forest by fungal hyphae.
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