Dinámica temporal de la masa de broza en distintos microhábitats del desierto del Monte Central (Mendoza, Argentina)

Fertility patches under woody plant canopies in desert ecosystems may occur because the extended root systems of trees and shrubs absorb nutrients and deposit them below plant canopies during litterfall. The final effect of woody plants on soil fertility depends on different processes that tra...

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Publicado en:Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias
Autores principales: Álvarez, Juan, Aranibar, Julieta, Miner, Anahí, Villagra, Pablo
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Acceso en línea:https://bdigital.uncu.edu.ar/fichas.php?idobjeto=6473
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Sumario:Fertility patches under woody plant canopies in desert ecosystems may occur because the extended root systems of trees and shrubs absorb nutrients and deposit them below plant canopies during litterfall. The final effect of woody plants on soil fertility depends on different processes that transform litter and liberate nutrients to the soil. The woody legume Prosopis flexuosa D.C. produces the highest amount of litter in the Monte desert, generating islands of fertility under its canopy. In this study, we analyzed the temporal dynamics of litter mass fell under P. flexuosa and experimentally relocalized in different microsites (under P. flexuosa, under the shrub Larrea divaricata, in the previous canopy area of cut P. flexuosa trees, and in exposed areas). We found the highest decrease of litter mass in winter, similar for all microsites, and a lower decrease and higher spatial heterogeneity in spring and summer. Our results suggest that litter dynamics in the Monte desert is mainly controlled by litter quality, because the highest litter mass loss occurred immediately after the addition of litter, even under environmental conditions not favorable for biologic activity (i.e., cold and dry winter). Although the different microsites showed differences in litter mass dynamics, the total magnitude of litter mass changes was similar for all microsites, indicating that spatial heterogeneity in litter mass loss is not an important factor in generating spatial heterogeneity of soil fertility. Moreover, other factors, as litter relocalization by arthropods observed in our study and possibly wind and water, seem to play an important role in moderating the spatial differences of litterfall patterns caused by woody plants.