Another dimension to grazing systems : Soil carbon

In 1998, Fisher et al. attempted to draw together published and anecdotal information to answer some of the questions raised by the findings of Fisher et al. (1994; 1995), that introduced pastures of African grasses on the eastern plains of Colombia accumulated large amounts of C in the soil. This r...

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Autores principales: Fisher, Myles J., Santos, R.S.M. dos, Alves, Bruno J.R., Boddey, Robert M., Braz, S.P., Urquiaga, S.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43186
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author Fisher, Myles J.
Santos, R.S.M. dos
Alves, Bruno J.R.
Boddey, Robert M.
Braz, S.P.
Urquiaga, S.
author_browse Alves, Bruno J.R.
Boddey, Robert M.
Braz, S.P.
Fisher, Myles J.
Santos, R.S.M. dos
Urquiaga, S.
author_facet Fisher, Myles J.
Santos, R.S.M. dos
Alves, Bruno J.R.
Boddey, Robert M.
Braz, S.P.
Urquiaga, S.
author_sort Fisher, Myles J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In 1998, Fisher et al. attempted to draw together published and anecdotal information to answer some of the questions raised by the findings of Fisher et al. (1994; 1995), that introduced pastures of African grasses on the eastern plains of Colombia accumulated large amounts of C in the soil. This review synthesises the work in both Colombia and Brazil over the last 7 years that answers some of the questions raised and speculations made by Fisher et al. (1998). The most important studies have shown that the rate at which litter decays at the soil surface has been grossly underestimated in the past. As a consequence, net aerial primary productivity (NAPP) was shown to be 33.3–33.5 t/ha/yr in well managed pastures of introduced grasses without either a legume component or N fertiliser. While data for soil C vary according to the past history and states of the pasture, well managed pastures do accumulate C in the soil to levels above that under the native grassland vegetation. Net primary productivity below ground was only slightly less than NAPP. Deficiencies of N and P are primarily responsible for the widespread degradation that occurs when introduced pastures are overgrazed and not fertilised. Heavy stocking rates profoundly change the N cycle and lead to N deficiency and hence degradation in the bulk pasture area by concentrating N recycling from faeces and urine in rest areas and watering points. Here the pasture is so damaged by trampling that it cannot take advantage of the increased fertility.
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spelling CGSpace431862025-11-12T05:54:34Z Another dimension to grazing systems : Soil carbon Fisher, Myles J. Santos, R.S.M. dos Alves, Bruno J.R. Boddey, Robert M. Braz, S.P. Urquiaga, S. feed crops grasslands pastures grazing systems biomass carbon soil praderas pastizales sistemas de pastoreo biomasa carbono suelo In 1998, Fisher et al. attempted to draw together published and anecdotal information to answer some of the questions raised by the findings of Fisher et al. (1994; 1995), that introduced pastures of African grasses on the eastern plains of Colombia accumulated large amounts of C in the soil. This review synthesises the work in both Colombia and Brazil over the last 7 years that answers some of the questions raised and speculations made by Fisher et al. (1998). The most important studies have shown that the rate at which litter decays at the soil surface has been grossly underestimated in the past. As a consequence, net aerial primary productivity (NAPP) was shown to be 33.3–33.5 t/ha/yr in well managed pastures of introduced grasses without either a legume component or N fertiliser. While data for soil C vary according to the past history and states of the pasture, well managed pastures do accumulate C in the soil to levels above that under the native grassland vegetation. Net primary productivity below ground was only slightly less than NAPP. Deficiencies of N and P are primarily responsible for the widespread degradation that occurs when introduced pastures are overgrazed and not fertilised. Heavy stocking rates profoundly change the N cycle and lead to N deficiency and hence degradation in the bulk pasture area by concentrating N recycling from faeces and urine in rest areas and watering points. Here the pasture is so damaged by trampling that it cannot take advantage of the increased fertility. 2007 2014-09-24T08:41:45Z 2014-09-24T08:41:45Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43186 en Open Access application/pdf Fisher, M.J.; Braz, S.P.; Santos, R.S.M. dos; Urquiaga, S.; Alves, B.J.R.; Boddey, R.M.; (2007) Another dimension to grazing systems: Soil carbon. Tropical Grasslands 41 p. 65–83 ISSN: 2346-3775
spellingShingle feed crops
grasslands
pastures
grazing systems
biomass
carbon
soil
praderas
pastizales
sistemas de pastoreo
biomasa
carbono
suelo
Fisher, Myles J.
Santos, R.S.M. dos
Alves, Bruno J.R.
Boddey, Robert M.
Braz, S.P.
Urquiaga, S.
Another dimension to grazing systems : Soil carbon
title Another dimension to grazing systems : Soil carbon
title_full Another dimension to grazing systems : Soil carbon
title_fullStr Another dimension to grazing systems : Soil carbon
title_full_unstemmed Another dimension to grazing systems : Soil carbon
title_short Another dimension to grazing systems : Soil carbon
title_sort another dimension to grazing systems soil carbon
topic feed crops
grasslands
pastures
grazing systems
biomass
carbon
soil
praderas
pastizales
sistemas de pastoreo
biomasa
carbono
suelo
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43186
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