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Soil mineral and microbial nitrogen in oil palm-based agroforestry systems in eastern Amazon

The success of oil palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.)-based agroforestry systems (oil palm-AFS) depends on sustainable soil management, especially of soil chemical and microbiological characteristics. Our objective was to evaluate the impact of oil palm-AFS on soil mineral and microbial nitrogen (N) in contrasting rainfall seasons. We evaluated different soil nitrogen (N) forms (microbial-N, nitrate, ammonium) and soil carbon concentration in oil palm-AFS with low and high diversity of species planted, which were compared with an adjacent 13-yr-old secondary forest. Most variables (total N, C:N ratio, microbial-N, microbial-N:total N ratio, ammonium, and net nitrification rate) varied only in response to rainfall seasonality. Soil C was significantly higher in the high diversity AFS (15.6 mg g-1) than in the secondary forest (13.0 mg g-1). In the rainy season, nitrate concentration (5.1 mg N kg-1 soil) was higher in the high diversity AFS than in other vegetation types; consequently, the average soil ammonium concentration (9.6 mg N kg-1 soil) was significantly lower in the high diversity AFS. Net N mineralization in the low diversity AFS (0.1 mg N kg-1 soil day-1) in the dry season was significantly lower than in other vegetation types. The soil variables were more sensitive to the rainfall seasonality than to the conversion of secondary forest to oil palm-based agroforestry systems.

ammonium; Elaeis guineensis; nitrate


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