• Title of article

    Aggregate stability and related properties in NW Patagonian Andisols

  • Author/Authors

    Florencia Candan، نويسنده , , Patricia Broquen، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    42
  • To page
    47
  • Abstract
    Resilience is an ecological concept explaining responses to disturbance or stress. For the soil system, it is defined as the ability of the soil to recover its condition of origin. Not much is known about the factors and processes that determine soil resilience and this research project was conducted to study soil resilience through analysis of changes in aggregate stability of Andisols supporting Pinus ponderosa Dougl. that replaced former Nothofagus sp. forest. Five sites with three treatments each were selected. Treatments included native forest, thinned exotic plantation forest and non-thinned exotic plantation forest. Bulk density and aggregate stability of the first 5 cm of the A-horizon were determined in undisturbed samples at field moisture, and the aggregate size distribution was determined involving the fractions of 8–2; 2–0.25; 0.25–0.053 and  80% of > 0.25 mm aggregates), indicating the relatively high stability of such Andisols; ii) highest organic matter contents found in the smallest sized aggregates, and iii) formation of stable soil aggregates to be significantly correlated with organic matter, Al activity, base content and soil reaction.
  • Keywords
    Land use , volcanic ash soils , Pinus ponderosa , Nothofagus sp. , Resilience , Organic matter , structural stability
  • Journal title
    GEODERMA
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    GEODERMA
  • Record number

    1297774