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Effects of broadleaf plantation and Chinese fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata) plantation on soil carbon and nitrogen pools.

WAN Xiao-hua1,2, HUANG Zhi-qun1,2, HE Zong-ming3, HU Zhen-hong1,2, YANG Jing-yu3, YU Zai-peng1,2, WANG Min-huang1,2   

  1. (1Cultivation Base of State Key Laboratory of Humid Subtropical Mountain Ecology, Fuzhou 350007, China; 2School of Geographical Science, Fujian Normal University, Fuzhou 350007, China; 3Forestry College of Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou 350002,China)
  • Online:2013-02-18 Published:2013-02-18

Abstract: A comparative study was conducted on the soil C and N pools in a 19year-old broadleaf plantation and a Chinese fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata) plantation in subtropical China, aimed to understand the effects of tree species on the soil C and N pools. In the broadleaf plantation, the C and N stocks in 0-40 cm soil layer were 99.41 Mg·hm-2 and 6.18 Mg·hm-2, being 33.1 % and 22.6 % larger than those in Chinese fir plantation, respectively. The standing biomass and the C and N stocks of forest floor in the broadleaf plantation were 1.60, 1.49, and 1.52 times of those in Chinese fir plantation, respectively, and the differences were statistically significant. There was a significant negative relationship between the forest floor C/N ratio and the soil C and N stocks. In the broadleaf plantation, the fine root biomass in 0-80 cm soil layer was 1.28 times of that in the Chinese fir plantation, and the fine root biomass in 0-10 cm soil layer accounted for 48.2 % of the total fine root biomass. The C and N stocks in the fine roots in the broadleaf plantation were also higher than those in the Chinese fir plantation. In 0-10 cm soil layer, its C stock had a significant positive relationship with the fine root C stock. It was suggested that as compared with  Chinese fir plantation, the soil in broadleaf plantation had a greater potential to accumulate organiccarbon.