Journal article
Linkages among land use, macronutrient levels, and soil erosion in northern Vietnam: A plot-scale study
Geoderma, Vol.232-234, pp.352-362
2014
Abstract
Objective: This study examined the interrelations among vegetative cover and biomass, soil macronutrient levels, and soil erosion in northern Vietnam. Methods: We selected ten dominant land-use types in a hilly area of western Hanoi including bare soil, agriculture (cassava or lemon grass), shrub land, five types of plantation forest, and indigenous forest. We measured the understory biomass, litter biomass, canopy openness, soil moisture content, soil pedestal height, soil hardness, soil bulk density, 137Cs and 210Pbex activities, and soil carbon and nitrogen on three 1m2 plots for each land-use type. Soil erosion was calculated from both pedestal heights and radionuclides. Multivariate statistical analysis was used to identify the key factors controlling soil erosion and nutrient accumulations. Results: Understory biomass ranged from 2 to 375gm-2, and this tended to be higher in most of the forest types and shrubland than in cassava and lemon grass. In contrast, the amount of ground cover varied more by forest type than between the agricultural land uses and forest lands. The height of soil pedestals indicated that short-term soil erosion was negligible when understory biomass was greater than 130 to 150gm-2. 137Cs was only detected in the cassava plots, whereas 210Pbex indicated widely different erosion rates across the land uses, with lower values in the agricultural lands and two types of forest plantations, although this may be due to soil management practices. Both the correlation and principal component analyses showed that soil organic carbon and nitrogen were positively correlated to understory biomass and strongly and inversely influenced by bulk density. Soil erosion as indicated by soil pedestal height was strongly and inversely controlled by ground cover, litter, and understory biomass. Soil erosion was also heavily influential to soil chemical richness and bulk density. Conclusions: Ground vegetation cover and the resultant soil erosion processes altered the production and accumulation of SOC, while forest cover did not always result in high soil fertility or low erosion. A simple characterization of forest or non-forest is not sufficient to calculate carbon and nutrient stocks, or assess erosion risk. Practice: Understory biomass of at least 130gm-2 and high ground cover are essential for reducing soil erosion and sustaining short- and long-term soil productivity. Implications: Rapidly developing areas in Southeast Asia, including hilly areas in North Vietnam, need to maintain understory biomass and ground cover for soil and nutrient conservation. © 2014 Elsevier B.V.
Details
- Title
- Linkages among land use, macronutrient levels, and soil erosion in northern Vietnam: A plot-scale study
- Authors
- P T Q Anh (Author) - Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, JapanT Gomi (Author) - Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, JapanL H MacDonald (Author) - Colorado State University, United StatesS Mizugaki (Author) - Public Works Research Institute, JapanP Van Khoa (Author) - Vietnam Forestry University, VietnamTakahisa Furuichi (Author) - Department of Science, IT, Innovation and the Arts
- Publication details
- Geoderma, Vol.232-234, pp.352-362
- Publisher
- Elsevier BV
- Date published
- 2014
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.geoderma.2014.05.011
- ISSN
- 0016-7061
- Organisation Unit
- University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland; Sustainability Research Cluster
- Language
- English
- Record Identifier
- 99449113502621
- Output Type
- Journal article
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