scholarly journals Soil Organic Carbon Stocks and Nitrogen Content Comparison in Different Slope Positions in Native Grasslands and Adjacent Cultivated Soils (Case Study: Kermanshah Mountain Rangelands, Iran)

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tibor József Novák ◽  
László Márta ◽  
Szabolcs Balogh

<p>Post agricultural development of traditionally intensively cultivated high fertility soils is a relevant question in surroundings of towns affected by urban sprawl, where extent areas of former cultivated soils are converted into residential, industrial or infrastructural surfaces. Part of these areas will covered by artificially sealed soils, but always extent areas remain for green areas, managed with different intensity, which allows recharge of soil organic carbon stocks and soil regeneration processes. In our study agricultural and post agricultural soils were sampled in a Chernozemic landscape affected by urbanization processes. Besides of other regeneration processes, concerning to the improvement of soil structure, we found that soil organic carbon stocks in the 0-30 cm soil layer are significantly higher in post agricultural soils (9.4±0.5 kg·m<sup>-2</sup>) as in ploughed (6.4±0.8 kg·m<sup>-2</sup>) or in ploughed plus irrigated (5.6±0.7 kg·m<sup>-2</sup>) profiles. The difference was found to be significant not only until the depth of the cultivated layer (30 cm), but until the sampled 70 cm depth throughout (17.8±0.9; 10.8±3.3 and 10.6±2.7 kg·m<sup>-2</sup> respectively). Our results point on the high carbon recovery potential of suburban areas converted from fertile cultivated soils.</p>


2021 ◽  
pp. 146-150
Author(s):  
B. Kalaiselvi ◽  
Rajendra Hegde ◽  
K. S. Anil Kumar ◽  
R. Vasundhara ◽  
S. Dharumarajan ◽  
...  

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