Origin and dynamics of soil organic matter and vegetation changes during the Holocene in a Forest-Savanna transition zone, Brazilian Amazon region
2001
Carbon isotope data on soil organic matter (SOM) were collected along an ecosystem transect 90 m in length that includes a tropical forest on the plateau, a transitional forest-savanna and savanna in a depression. Total organic carbon data show a significant increase in carbon content from sites representing forest ecosystem to sites representing savanna ecosystem. It was hypothesized that carbon accumulation in the depression is controlled by flooding conditions that slow down carbon decomposition and in part by carbon transport from the upper part of the transect (the savanna and the transition forest-savanna areas) into the depressions by water during the rainy season. The origin of the carbon was confirmed by using soil 13 C analysis. The savanna sites located in the depression showed δ 13C values between –19.5‰ and –22.5‰ indicating a mixture of C3 and C4 plants. The vegetation cover in the depression is predominantly C3 grasses with d 13C values of about –27‰ and –26‰. In the site under savanna loca...
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