Comparison of soil microfauna diversity between a burnt and unburnt peatland in Indonesia

Approximately 95 percent of peatlands in Indonesia have been degraded by forest fires or converted for cultivation. Forest fires release huge volumes of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and have caused severe damage to Indonesia’s ecosystems and biodiversity, particularly in Kalimantan and Sumatra...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shin, S., Bhatta, K.P., Wahyuni, N.S., Samsudin, Y.B., Artati, Y., Baral, H.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Center for International Forestry Research 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120158
_version_ 1855541119381667840
author Shin, S.
Bhatta, K.P.
Wahyuni, N.S.
Samsudin, Y.B.
Artati, Y.
Baral, H.
author_browse Artati, Y.
Baral, H.
Bhatta, K.P.
Samsudin, Y.B.
Shin, S.
Wahyuni, N.S.
author_facet Shin, S.
Bhatta, K.P.
Wahyuni, N.S.
Samsudin, Y.B.
Artati, Y.
Baral, H.
author_sort Shin, S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Approximately 95 percent of peatlands in Indonesia have been degraded by forest fires or converted for cultivation. Forest fires release huge volumes of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and have caused severe damage to Indonesia’s ecosystems and biodiversity, particularly in Kalimantan and Sumatra. Even though understanding post-fire environmental dynamics and biodiversity changes would be highly beneficial in determining restoration processes, baseline analyses on biodiversity and soil moisture content in burnt and degraded peatlands remain limited. Consequently, this research explores and assesses soil macrofauna diversity and properties, and changes in soil fauna patterns in a burnt peatland area currently undergoing restoration with the establishment of a bioenergy plantation in Buntoi village, Central Kalimantan province, Indonesia. Results from the study site show peatland fires causing hugely reduced numbers of soil mesofauna and macrofauna individuals, and bioenergy tree survival rates being higher in plots on unburnt than burnt peatland. Fauna species diversity, gauged using the Shannon diversity index (H), was lower in burnt than unburnt areas, though some orders – such as Hymenoptera – appear to adapt well to burned areas as we found them in both burnt and unburnt plots. Results show a significant correlation between peat fires and biodiversity. We also found that the more seriously fire damaged bioenergy trees were, the higher the likelihood of biodiversity decreasing. Generally, soil moisture and nutrient availability are key factors supporting higher soil invertebrate diversity in unburnt areas. However, results showed no significant correlation between soil moisture content and soil fauna diversity in our research site. In conclusion, understanding the severe impacts of fire on peatlands will make people more aware and less likely to use fire for clearing and preparing peatlands, thereby prolonging their use.
format Book Chapter
id CGSpace120158
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Center for International Forestry Research
publisherStr Center for International Forestry Research
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1201582023-02-15T01:23:36Z Comparison of soil microfauna diversity between a burnt and unburnt peatland in Indonesia Shin, S. Bhatta, K.P. Wahyuni, N.S. Samsudin, Y.B. Artati, Y. Baral, H. biodiversity conservation ecological restoration bioenergy shifting cultivation Approximately 95 percent of peatlands in Indonesia have been degraded by forest fires or converted for cultivation. Forest fires release huge volumes of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and have caused severe damage to Indonesia’s ecosystems and biodiversity, particularly in Kalimantan and Sumatra. Even though understanding post-fire environmental dynamics and biodiversity changes would be highly beneficial in determining restoration processes, baseline analyses on biodiversity and soil moisture content in burnt and degraded peatlands remain limited. Consequently, this research explores and assesses soil macrofauna diversity and properties, and changes in soil fauna patterns in a burnt peatland area currently undergoing restoration with the establishment of a bioenergy plantation in Buntoi village, Central Kalimantan province, Indonesia. Results from the study site show peatland fires causing hugely reduced numbers of soil mesofauna and macrofauna individuals, and bioenergy tree survival rates being higher in plots on unburnt than burnt peatland. Fauna species diversity, gauged using the Shannon diversity index (H), was lower in burnt than unburnt areas, though some orders – such as Hymenoptera – appear to adapt well to burned areas as we found them in both burnt and unburnt plots. Results show a significant correlation between peat fires and biodiversity. We also found that the more seriously fire damaged bioenergy trees were, the higher the likelihood of biodiversity decreasing. Generally, soil moisture and nutrient availability are key factors supporting higher soil invertebrate diversity in unburnt areas. However, results showed no significant correlation between soil moisture content and soil fauna diversity in our research site. In conclusion, understanding the severe impacts of fire on peatlands will make people more aware and less likely to use fire for clearing and preparing peatlands, thereby prolonging their use. 2022-05-01 2022-07-19T02:20:21Z 2022-07-19T02:20:21Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120158 en Open Access Center for International Forestry Research Shin, S., Bhatta, K.P., Wahyuni, N.S., Samsudin, Y.B., Artati, Y., Baral, H., 2022. Comparison of soil microfauna diversity between a burnt and unburnt peatland in Indonesia. In. Baral H, Leksono B and Seol M. (eds.), Bioenergy for landscape restoration and livelihoods: Re-creating energy-smart ecosystems on degraded landscapes. Bogor, Indonesia: CIFOR. https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/008500-08
spellingShingle biodiversity conservation
ecological restoration
bioenergy
shifting cultivation
Shin, S.
Bhatta, K.P.
Wahyuni, N.S.
Samsudin, Y.B.
Artati, Y.
Baral, H.
Comparison of soil microfauna diversity between a burnt and unburnt peatland in Indonesia
title Comparison of soil microfauna diversity between a burnt and unburnt peatland in Indonesia
title_full Comparison of soil microfauna diversity between a burnt and unburnt peatland in Indonesia
title_fullStr Comparison of soil microfauna diversity between a burnt and unburnt peatland in Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of soil microfauna diversity between a burnt and unburnt peatland in Indonesia
title_short Comparison of soil microfauna diversity between a burnt and unburnt peatland in Indonesia
title_sort comparison of soil microfauna diversity between a burnt and unburnt peatland in indonesia
topic biodiversity conservation
ecological restoration
bioenergy
shifting cultivation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120158
work_keys_str_mv AT shins comparisonofsoilmicrofaunadiversitybetweenaburntandunburntpeatlandinindonesia
AT bhattakp comparisonofsoilmicrofaunadiversitybetweenaburntandunburntpeatlandinindonesia
AT wahyunins comparisonofsoilmicrofaunadiversitybetweenaburntandunburntpeatlandinindonesia
AT samsudinyb comparisonofsoilmicrofaunadiversitybetweenaburntandunburntpeatlandinindonesia
AT artatiy comparisonofsoilmicrofaunadiversitybetweenaburntandunburntpeatlandinindonesia
AT baralh comparisonofsoilmicrofaunadiversitybetweenaburntandunburntpeatlandinindonesia