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  4. Disentangling how management affects biomass stock and productivity of tropical secondary forests fallows
 

Disentangling how management affects biomass stock and productivity of tropical secondary forests fallows

URI
https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/40935
Version
Published
Date Issued
2019-04-01
Author(s)
Moonen, Pieter C.J.
Verbist, Bruno
Boyemba Bosela, Faustin
Norgrove, Lindsey  
Dondeyne, Stefaan
Van Meerbeek, Koenraad
Kearsley, Elizabeth
Verbeeck, Hans
Vermeir, Pieter
Boeckx, Pascal
Muys, Bart
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
A better understanding of biomass production in secondary forests after cultivation is essential for assessing the resilience of slash and burn systems and their capacity to deliver ecosystem services. Biomass production is influenced by management legacies, landscape configuration and soil, but these drivers are rarely studied simultaneously, nor is the role of changes in vegetation properties in linking them to biomass production. We assessed how management legacies affect biomass in secondary forests created by slash and burn in the central Congo Basin, and tested whether changes in productivity could be attributed to changes in stem density, functional diversity, functional identity or soil. Using data from 6452 trees in 96 fallow plots nested in 3 study sites, we looked for the main determinants of aboveground biomass (AGB) of woody vegetation in fallow systems. Next, using a subset of 58 plots in fallow fields aged 5 to 10 years, we used confirmatory path analysis to explore the relations between management history, soil, vegetation properties and biomass productivity. The sampled fallow fields had, on average, 58.4 (±46.2) Mg ha−1 AGB. AGB was positively related to both fallow age and to the proportion of remnant trees in AGB and negatively related to the number of previous cultivation cycles. Biomass productivity varied with the number of previous slash-and-burn cycles, with notable declines in the fourth cycle. The effect of management history was mainly through a reduction in the dominance of fast growing tree species and in the number of regenerating stems, which were also indirectly affected by an increase in C. odorata cover. Soil fertility status and the biomass of remnant trees also modified biomass productivity. Our findings suggest that under the current management intensity the capacity of the slash and burn system to provide important ecosystem functions, such as carbon sequestration, is declining.
Subjects
GE Environmental Sciences
QK Botany
SD Forestry
DOI
10.24451/arbor.9033
https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.9033
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.12.138
Journal or Serie
Science of The Total Environment
ISSN
00489697
Publisher URL
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969718349702
Organization
Ressourceneffiziente landwirtschaftliche Produktionssysteme  
HAFL Institut Hugo P. Cecchini  
Agronomie  
Hochschule für Agrar-, Forst- und Lebensmittelwissenschaften  
Volume
659
Publisher
Elsevier
Submitter
Lutz, Simon
Citation apa
Moonen, P. C. J., Verbist, B., Boyemba Bosela, F., Norgrove, L., Dondeyne, S., Van Meerbeek, K., Kearsley, E., Verbeeck, H., Vermeir, P., Boeckx, P., & Muys, B. (2019). Disentangling how management affects biomass stock and productivity of tropical secondary forests fallows. In Science of The Total Environment (Vol. 659, pp. 101–114). Elsevier. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.9033
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