Conversion of tropical rainforest: agronomic potential and ecological consequences

This chapter describes the agronomic potential and ecological consequences of conversion of tropical rainforest. Tropical rainforest refers to the climax vegetation of the lowland humid tropics where there is either a short period of water deficit or none at all. Tropical rainforest is confined to t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Lal, R.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 1986
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177260
_version_ 1855532830465982464
author Lal, R.
author_browse Lal, R.
author_facet Lal, R.
author_sort Lal, R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This chapter describes the agronomic potential and ecological consequences of conversion of tropical rainforest. Tropical rainforest refers to the climax vegetation of the lowland humid tropics where there is either a short period of water deficit or none at all. Tropical rainforest is confined to the equatorial region and is a very diverse and complex ecosystem. Soil is an integral element of the rainforest ecosystem and is as much influenced by the vegetation as the vegetation itself is influenced by the soil. Soils supporting tropical rainforests are usually old, highly weathered, and excessively leached. Estimates of forest conversion in the Brazilian Amazon, in tropical Africa, and in the tropics are presented. Possible local effects of deforestation on biophysical environments are explained. Major effects are on microclimate, water and energy balance, nutrient capital with disruption in pathways of various nutrient elements, soil, flora and fauna composition and activity. Deforestation for intensive land use is an important factor in forest conversion. Methods of deforestation vary widely depending on the intended cropping systems, and soil and crop management methods. It is suggested that forest conversion for plantation crops should also be preferably done by manual, and slash and burn methods.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace177260
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1986
publishDateRange 1986
publishDateSort 1986
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1772602025-11-11T10:38:28Z Conversion of tropical rainforest: agronomic potential and ecological consequences Lal, R. tropical rainforest agronomic vegetation climate soil properties air temperature water balance This chapter describes the agronomic potential and ecological consequences of conversion of tropical rainforest. Tropical rainforest refers to the climax vegetation of the lowland humid tropics where there is either a short period of water deficit or none at all. Tropical rainforest is confined to the equatorial region and is a very diverse and complex ecosystem. Soil is an integral element of the rainforest ecosystem and is as much influenced by the vegetation as the vegetation itself is influenced by the soil. Soils supporting tropical rainforests are usually old, highly weathered, and excessively leached. Estimates of forest conversion in the Brazilian Amazon, in tropical Africa, and in the tropics are presented. Possible local effects of deforestation on biophysical environments are explained. Major effects are on microclimate, water and energy balance, nutrient capital with disruption in pathways of various nutrient elements, soil, flora and fauna composition and activity. Deforestation for intensive land use is an important factor in forest conversion. Methods of deforestation vary widely depending on the intended cropping systems, and soil and crop management methods. It is suggested that forest conversion for plantation crops should also be preferably done by manual, and slash and burn methods. 1986 2025-10-22T09:40:34Z 2025-10-22T09:40:34Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177260 en Limited Access application/pdf Lal, R. (1986). Conversion of tropical rainforest: agronomic potential and ecological consequences. Advances in Agronomy, 39, 173-264.
spellingShingle tropical rainforest
agronomic
vegetation
climate
soil properties
air temperature
water balance
Lal, R.
Conversion of tropical rainforest: agronomic potential and ecological consequences
title Conversion of tropical rainforest: agronomic potential and ecological consequences
title_full Conversion of tropical rainforest: agronomic potential and ecological consequences
title_fullStr Conversion of tropical rainforest: agronomic potential and ecological consequences
title_full_unstemmed Conversion of tropical rainforest: agronomic potential and ecological consequences
title_short Conversion of tropical rainforest: agronomic potential and ecological consequences
title_sort conversion of tropical rainforest agronomic potential and ecological consequences
topic tropical rainforest
agronomic
vegetation
climate
soil properties
air temperature
water balance
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177260
work_keys_str_mv AT lalr conversionoftropicalrainforestagronomicpotentialandecologicalconsequences