Production and nutrient content of earthworm casts in a tropical agrisilvicultural system

Earthworm surface cast production and nutrient turnover through casts were measured for 3 years in a 17-year-old timber plantation in southern Cameroon after selective reduction to two timber stand densities (TSDs) and understorey cropping with plantain and tannia. Neither understorey cropping nor t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Norgrove, L., Hauser, S.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92647
_version_ 1855525559861248000
author Norgrove, L.
Hauser, S.
author_browse Hauser, S.
Norgrove, L.
author_facet Norgrove, L.
Hauser, S.
author_sort Norgrove, L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Earthworm surface cast production and nutrient turnover through casts were measured for 3 years in a 17-year-old timber plantation in southern Cameroon after selective reduction to two timber stand densities (TSDs) and understorey cropping with plantain and tannia. Neither understorey cropping nor timber stand density treatments had significant effects upon cast production in any year. Mean cast production in cropped plots was 35.7 Mg ha−1in the first year, 34.9 Mg ha−1 in year 2 and 30.1 Mg ha−1 in year 3. This was 63%, 84%, and 65%, respectively, of cast production in undisturbed, unthinned timber plantation plots. In comparing cast nutrient concentrations between years 1, 2 and 3, there were highly significant correlations for nearly all nutrients in control plots but fewer such correlations in the low TSD. In cropped plots, none of earthworm parameters was correlated with nutrient concentrations of slash or amounts of slash applied to the soil surface at establishment. There were positive correlations between cast N and litterfall N (kg ha−1 y−1) in both year 2 (cast N = 0.49 × litterfall N + 61.7, r2=0.46) and year 3 (cast N = 0.38 × litterfall N + 55.6, r2=0.42). The ratio of soil:cast nutrient concentrations were related by negative power functions to soil nutrient concentrations for all nutrients and organic carbon. This suggests that earthworm communities adjust to lower soil nutrient concentrations by increasing their selectivity and thus produce relatively higher quality casts on poorer soil.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace92647
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2000
publishDateRange 2000
publishDateSort 2000
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace926472024-05-15T05:11:41Z Production and nutrient content of earthworm casts in a tropical agrisilvicultural system Norgrove, L. Hauser, S. agroforestry southern cameroon terminalia ivorensis timber stand density soil nutrient concentration soil fertility soil organic matter ecosystem earthworm population Earthworm surface cast production and nutrient turnover through casts were measured for 3 years in a 17-year-old timber plantation in southern Cameroon after selective reduction to two timber stand densities (TSDs) and understorey cropping with plantain and tannia. Neither understorey cropping nor timber stand density treatments had significant effects upon cast production in any year. Mean cast production in cropped plots was 35.7 Mg ha−1in the first year, 34.9 Mg ha−1 in year 2 and 30.1 Mg ha−1 in year 3. This was 63%, 84%, and 65%, respectively, of cast production in undisturbed, unthinned timber plantation plots. In comparing cast nutrient concentrations between years 1, 2 and 3, there were highly significant correlations for nearly all nutrients in control plots but fewer such correlations in the low TSD. In cropped plots, none of earthworm parameters was correlated with nutrient concentrations of slash or amounts of slash applied to the soil surface at establishment. There were positive correlations between cast N and litterfall N (kg ha−1 y−1) in both year 2 (cast N = 0.49 × litterfall N + 61.7, r2=0.46) and year 3 (cast N = 0.38 × litterfall N + 55.6, r2=0.42). The ratio of soil:cast nutrient concentrations were related by negative power functions to soil nutrient concentrations for all nutrients and organic carbon. This suggests that earthworm communities adjust to lower soil nutrient concentrations by increasing their selectivity and thus produce relatively higher quality casts on poorer soil. 2000-10 2018-05-17T09:02:58Z 2018-05-17T09:02:58Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92647 en Limited Access Elsevier Norgrove, L. & Hauser, S. (2000). Production and nutrient content of earthworm casts in a tropical agrisilvicultural system. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 32(11-12), 1651-1660.
spellingShingle agroforestry
southern cameroon
terminalia ivorensis
timber stand density
soil nutrient concentration
soil fertility
soil organic matter
ecosystem
earthworm population
Norgrove, L.
Hauser, S.
Production and nutrient content of earthworm casts in a tropical agrisilvicultural system
title Production and nutrient content of earthworm casts in a tropical agrisilvicultural system
title_full Production and nutrient content of earthworm casts in a tropical agrisilvicultural system
title_fullStr Production and nutrient content of earthworm casts in a tropical agrisilvicultural system
title_full_unstemmed Production and nutrient content of earthworm casts in a tropical agrisilvicultural system
title_short Production and nutrient content of earthworm casts in a tropical agrisilvicultural system
title_sort production and nutrient content of earthworm casts in a tropical agrisilvicultural system
topic agroforestry
southern cameroon
terminalia ivorensis
timber stand density
soil nutrient concentration
soil fertility
soil organic matter
ecosystem
earthworm population
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92647
work_keys_str_mv AT norgrovel productionandnutrientcontentofearthwormcastsinatropicalagrisilviculturalsystem
AT hausers productionandnutrientcontentofearthwormcastsinatropicalagrisilviculturalsystem