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Labile Phosphorus in Soils of Forest Fallows and Primary Forest in the Bragantina Region, Brazil
Authors:Jacqueline Frizano  David R Vann  Arthur H Johnson  Christine M Johnson  Ima C G Vieira  Daniel J Zarin
Institution:Department of Earth and Environmental Science, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, U.S.A.;Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi, Dept. de Botanica, Belem-Para, Brazil 66.040-170 and;School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, U.S.A.
Abstract:We used the Hedley sequential extraction procedure to measure nine different organic inorganic soil phosphorus fractions in forest soil of the Bragantina region of Para, Brazil. We compared the labile fractions (resin‐extractable P + HCO3‐extractable inorganic and organic P) in Oxisols from three secondary forests (10, 20, and 40 years old) and a primary forest. These stands were located in an area that has supported shifting agriculture for approximately a century. After agricultural use, total P and labile P in soils of young secondary forests are diminished compared to the amounts presents in the primary forest soil. Within each stand, organic carbon content was a good predictor of labile organic and inorganic P, consistent with the large body of research indicating that mineralization of organic matter is important to plant nutrition in tropical ecosystems. During the reorganization of P pools during forest development, the pool of labile organic P (HCO3‐extractable) diminishes more than the other labile fractions, suggesting that it is directly or indirectly an important source of P for the regrowing forest vegetation. Across the four age classes of forest, the soil reservoir of labile P was equal to or greater than the total amount of P in the vegetation. If labile P measured by this method adequately represents P available to plants in the short term (as suggested by the current consensus), we would conclude that plant‐available P is reasonable abundant, and that the effects of agriculture on available P pools are detectable but not sufficient to compromise forest regrowth in this area.
Keywords:Amazonia  Brazilian forests  forest chronosequence  organic phosphorus  Oxisols  phosphorus fractionation  shifting agriculture  soil phosphorus
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