Burning causes long-term changes in soil organic matter content of a South African grassland |
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Authors: | R.W.S. FynnR.J. Haynes T.G. O'Connor |
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Affiliation: | Discipline of Soil Science, School of Applied Environmental Sciences, University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, Private Bag X01, Scottsville 3209, South Africa |
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Abstract: | The effects of burning a native grassland on soil organic matter status was investigated on a long-term (50 years) field experiment where different times and frequencies of burning were compared. Significant decreases in organic C were observed only in the surface 0-2 cm layer and only under annual and biennial winter burning and biennial and triennial autumn burning. Burning in spring did not significantly affect organic C content presumably because substantial amounts of litter decomposed and/or were incorporated into the soil by faunal activity prior to burning. Total N content was decreased substantially to a depth of 6 cm by all burning treatments and as a result, the C:N ratio of soil organic matter was widened. In addition, the amount of potentially mineralizable N, as measured by either aerobic incubation or plant N uptake in a pot experiment, was much reduced. Burning also induced a decrease in light fraction and hot water-extractable C in the 0-2 cm layer but an increase in these parameters, and in microbial biomass C and root density, in the 4-10 cm layer. This was attributed to burning causing a decrease in above-ground litter inputs but increased turnover of root material below the surface. Despite the decrease in organic C and total N content with increasing soil depth, potentially mineralizable N showed the opposite trend. This unexpected finding was confirmed at a nearby site under native grassland and contrasted with decreasing potentially mineralizable N with depth which was measured under a fertilized kikuyu grass dairy pasture. The wide C:N ratio of litter from native grassland, in association with the decreasing size and activity of the microbial biomass with depth results in greater N immobilization (thus less net mineralization) occurring in soil samples taken from close to the soil surface. |
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Keywords: | Burning Organic matter Grassland Nitrogen Light fraction Microbial biomass |
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