Nitrogen cycle of tropical perennial crops under shade trees |
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Authors: | J. Aranguren G. Escalante R. Herrera |
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Affiliation: | 1. Centro de Ecología, Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas (IVIC), Apartado 1827, 1010A, Caracas, Venezuela
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Abstract: | The distribution and fluxes of nitrogen in some parts of a coffee plantation under shade were studied at a typical mountain (1380 m a sl) location in Venezuela. The amounts of nitrogen in the soil to 60 cm depth are by far the largest nitrogen store, reaching a total of 49 000 kg ha?1. The nitrogen flow associated with litterfall was dominated by the shade-tree fraction accounting for a transfer of 86 kg ha?1 yr?1 of the total 189 kg ha?1 yr?1. The rapid decomposition of this litter, although showing a phase of nitrogen accumulation, is an important source of nitrogen to the roots of coffee which occupy preferentially the upper 30 cm of soil and even the litter layer itself. Some evidence of synchrony was found between the peaks of nitrogen transfer to the soil by litter and the periods of high nitrogen demand by the crop plants. It is proposed that the system can amply compensate the nitrogen outputs by harvest (17 kg ha?1 yr?1) with a subsidy from the shade trees.Erythrina sp. andInga sp. are potential nitrogen fixers although we found no active sites during the dry period sampled. The average litter decomposition constant, k, expressed in terms of nitrogen, was estimated as 4.5, equivalent to a half-life of approximately two months. |
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