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Soybean cultivation in the southeast Amazon and its implications to the nitrogen dynamics

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Author(s):
Adeláine Michela e Silva Figueira
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: Piracicaba.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Centro de Energia Nuclear na Agricultura (CENA/STB)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Luiz Antonio Martinelli; Bruno José Rodrigues Alves; Mercedes Maria da Cunha Bustamante; Eric Atlas Davidson; Reynaldo Luiz Victoria
Advisor: Luiz Antonio Martinelli
Abstract

Agricultural expansion has greatly changed the nitrogen (N) dynamics in tropical systems. The expanding soybean frontier in Brazil is a reality, and investigations of the processes driving N dynamics in these systems are needed to minimize environmental impacts and to promote the sustainability of agricultural systems. Biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) by legumes can provide significant N inputs to crop systems on highly weathered tropical soils, although the fate of these inputs in the environment and the balance between inputs and outputs of N in these systems is poorly understood. This work investigated N dynamics in a chronosequence of soybean fields (1, 2, 5 and 6 years of cultivation) and mature forest in the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso, which is at the southern limit of the Amazon forest. We measured soil N and C stocks, N-NO3-, N-NH4+ concentration and soil \'delta\'15N as well as biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) inputs by soybean, which were assessed using the 15N natural abundance technique under field conditions. Additional measurements of physical and chemical properties of soils were also provided. The land-use-conversion started from pasture, so this site was used as an initial reference for soil N stocks and soil \'delta\'15N. Mature forest stands on the ranch were also used as an additional reference. Soil N stocks (top 10cm) ranged from 1230 kg N ha-1 in the pasture to 1370 kg N ha-1 in the oldest soybean fields. The trend of increasing N stocks with field age was statistically significant. The annual N accumulation by soybean plant biomass was 158,6 kg N ha-1 in the oldest soy fields, of which 79% was estimated to be derived by BNF, based on the natural abundance technique. There was no statistically significant trend in the mineralization and nitrification rates among the areas. However, extracts of soil profiles showed significant increases in deep soil nitrate concentrations in soybean soils compared to forest soils. There was no statistically significant trend in the soil \'delta\'15N within the chronosequence of soybean fields, although the values were intermediate between the soil \'delta\'15N values found in the pasture and the forest. These results showed a pattern of nitrogen accumulation in the soil along the chronosequence of soybean fields, indicating a possible gradual return to soil N stocks and isotopic signatures occurring in the forest soil before the conversion to pasture and soybean, although this may not happen in the near future (AU)

FAPESP's process: 08/51343-7 - Expansion of the agricultural frontier in Amazonia and its implications in the cycling of N in the adjacent natural systems
Grantee:Adelaine Michela e Silva Figueira
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Doctorate