B31B-0550
Agriculture at the Edge: Landscape Variability of Soil C Stocks and Fluxes in the Tropical Andes
Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Diego A Riveros-Iregui, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States and Camilo Peña, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Agronomy, Bogota, Colombia
Abstract:
Paramos, or tropical alpine grasslands occurring right above the forest tree-line (2,800 – 4,700 m), are among the most transformed landscapes in the humid tropics. In the Tropical Andes, Paramos form an archipelago-like pattern from Northern Colombia to Central Peru that effectively captures atmospheric moisture originated in the Amazon-Orinoco basins, while marking the highest altitude capable of sustaining vegetation growth (i.e., ‘the edge’). This study investigates the role of land management on mediating soil carbon stocks and fluxes in Paramo ecosystems of the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia. Observations were collected at a Paramo site strongly modified by land use change, including active potato plantations, pasture, tillage, and land abandonment. Results show that undisturbed Paramos soils have high total organic carbon (TOC), high soil water content (SWC), and low soil CO2 efflux (RS) rates. However, Paramo soils that experience human intervention show lower TOC, higher and more variable RS rates, and lower SWC. This study demonstrates that changes in land use in Paramos affect differentially the accumulation and exchange of soil carbon with the atmosphere and offers implications for management and protection strategies of what has been deemed the fastest evolving biodiversity ecosystem in the world.