Soil nitrogen as affected by Gliricidia sepium in a silvopastoral system in Guadeloupe, French Antilles
Résumé
Knowledge of the status and dynamics of soil N is essential to improving the production and management of silvopastoral system in the tropics. Soil N status and dynamics were analyzed as key factors affecting productivity and sustainability of a cut-and-carry silvopastoral system. The total soil N and N mineralization as affected by soil moisture and temperature were studied in a Gliricidia sepium (Jacq.) Walp - Dichanthium aristatum (Poir) C.E. Hubbard grassland association and in an adjacent open grassland located in a subhumid tropical region. The plot was installed in 1989 and the pruning residues and cut grass were removed from the site. No N fertilizer was applied. Total soil N increased at an average rate of 180 kg N ha(-1) in the 0-0.2 m soil layer of the silvopastoral plot. Only a third of this value could be explained by the litter, nodule and root turnover. Nitrogen mineralization in both soils varied as a function of temperature but it was not affected by soil moisture. Even if mean soil temperature was 1 degreesC to 2 degreesC greater in the open grassland, the estimated daily rate of in-situ N mineralization was 20% greater in the silvopastoral system. Our results indicated that greater N mineralization in the silvopastoral system was due to greater soil biological activity associated with higher soil organic matter rather than due to more favorable soil temperature and water conditions.