The effect of vegetation removal on soil organic carbon losses: a 9 years experiment in semiarid SE Spain. Póster.
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10317/302Compartir
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Álvarez Rogel, José; Martínez-Mena García, María; Castillo Sánchez, Víctor María; Albaladejo Montoro, JuanDepartamento
Ciencia y Tecnología AgrariaÁrea de conocimiento
Edafología y Química AgrícolaFecha de publicación
2001Cita bibliográfica
ÁLVAREZ ROGEL, José et al. The effect of vegetation removal on soil organic carbon losses: a 9 years experiment in semiarid SE Spain. Póster. En: 3rd Internacional Conference on Land Degradation and Meeting of the IUSS Subcomisión C – ICLD3, 2001Palabras clave
SuelosDegradación
Mediterráneo
Soil erosion
Mediterranean
Degradation
Resumen
The vulnerability of Mediterranean arid and semiarid lands to human-induced changes in soil use means that the effects of climate change upon these environments will be exacerbated (Scharpen seel & Pfeiffer, 1998). Reduced precipitation or increased temperature accelerates l and degradation through the loss of plant cover, biomass turn over, nutrient cycling and soil organic carbon storage, accompanied by higher greenhouse emisions (Ojima et al.,1995). Moreover, if the projected increase in temperature following global climte change occurs, the degradative processes Will be aggravated (Kimble et al., 1998). Long term data series from natural rainfall events in semiarid environmnts are crucial for studying nutrient dynamics because: i) the soil's response within a few months of vegetation removal may not be sufficient for estimating its long-term behavior; and i i) it is difficult to produce data comparable to natural storms using rainfall simulators (Flanagan & Foster ,1989). The poster ...
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