Poster Number 140
See more from this Division: S04 Soil Fertility & Plant NutritionSee more from this Session: General Soil Fertility and Plant Nutrition: II
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Henry Gonzalez Convention Center, Hall C
In tropical Bolivia coffee plantations, the plant community can be separated into high (trees), middle (coffee), and low (weed) strata. Understanding the importance of each stratum is critical for improving the sustainability of the system. The objective of this study was to determine the importance of strata on nutrient recycling. Litter falls from the upper and middle strata were collected monthly using cone-shaped traps and divided by species into leaves, branches, flowers, and fruits. Dry biomass additions to the soil from high stratum and middle stratum totaled 12,655 kg (ha yr)-1 annually. About 76 % of the biomass was provided by plants of the genus Inga (I. adenophylla and I. oerstediana). This biomass contained 165 kg N (ha yr) -1, 11 kg P (ha yr) -1, 30 kg K (ha yr) -1 and 54 kg Ca (ha yr) -1. The middle stratum (Coffea arabica L.) provided 24 % litterfall biomass and contained 55 kg N ha-1, 5 kg P ha-1, 37 kg K ha-1, and 42 kg Ca ha -1. This stratum also produced 1800 kg coffee bean per ha (12% moisture) which sold for $2.94 kg-1. Nutrients removed in whole harvested green coffee beans were 57, 12, 122, 22, 13, and 17 kg (ha yr)-1 of N, P, K, Ca, Mg, and S, respectively. The N concentration in green beans suggests that the plant exceeded the critical N level. In the lower stratum, Oxalis mollissima returned 36 kg N ha-1, while Solanum nodiflorum returned 49 kg K ha-1, and Urtica sp. returned 18 kg Ca ha-1. The nutrients recycled through plants in three strata exceeded the amount of nutrients removed in green coffee beans.
See more from this Division: S04 Soil Fertility & Plant NutritionKeywords: Nutrient cycle, agroecosystem, litterfall, mesofauna, Inga spp, Coffea arabica
See more from this Session: General Soil Fertility and Plant Nutrition: II