Stable isotope ratios of pedogenic carbonate and organic matter were measured in a prairie-transition-forest soil biosequence near Ames, Iowa to determine the vegetation succession. The modern vegetation is dominated by non-native C plants which have been introduced by agricultural practices. The ฮดC
Forest savanna ecotone dynamics in India as revealed by carbon isotope ratios of soil organic matter
โ Scribed by A. Mariotti; E. Peterschmitt
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 576 KB
- Volume
- 97
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0029-8549
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
In India, the stability of the forest savanna boundary (ecotone) has been questioned. To investigate the possibility of vegetation change at this boundary, we used the natural difference in the stable carbon isotope ratio (C/C, expressed as ฮดC) of C (forest) and C (savanna) plants, which is preserved in the isotopic composition of soil organic carbon. Past changes in the position of the ecotone can thus be documented by C/C analysis of soil organic matter (SOM). Measurements were made on soil samples taken along a transect across the forest savanna boundary. In both ecosystems, ฮดC values of SOM in upper soil layers appeared to be in equilibrium with the current plant community: SOM was near-14โฐ under savanna cover, and near-28โฐ under forest. By contrast, ฮดC values of SOM from deep layers of soil profiles under forest cover near the ecotone, were less negative than would be expected for a C-dominated community. These results indicate that a change in ecosystem dominance occurred recently, and that forest has invaded an area occupied previously by a C plant community (savanna and cultivated grassland).
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES