Pesquisa Agropecuária Tropical (Jun 2021)

Effect of Savanna windrow wood burning on the spatial variability of soil properties

  • Diogo Neia Eberhardt,
  • Robélio Leandro Marchão,
  • Pedro Rodolfo Siqueira Vendrame,
  • Marc Corbeels,
  • Osvaldo Guedes Filho,
  • Eric Scopel,
  • Thierry Becquer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1983-40632021v5166853
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51
p. e66853

Abstract

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Tropical Savannas cover an area of approximately 1.9 billion hectares around the word and are subject to regular fires every 1 to 4 years. This study aimed to evaluate the influence of burning windrow wood from Cerrado (Brazilian Savanna) deforestation on the spatial variability of soil chemical properties, in the field. The data were analysed by using geostatistical methods. The semivariograms for pH(H2O), pH(CaCl2), Ca, Mg and K were calculated according to spherical models, whereas the phosphorus showed a nugget effect. The cross semi-variograms showed correlations between pH(H2O) and pH(CaCl2) with other variables with spatial dependence (exchangeable Ca and Mg and available K). The spatial variability maps for the pH(H2O), pH(CaCl2), Ca, Mg and K concentrations also showed similar patterns of spatial variability, indicating that burning the vegetation after deforestation caused a well-defined spatial arrangement. Even after 20 years of use with agriculture, the spatial distribution of pH(H2O), pH(CaCl2), Ca, Mg and available K was affected by the wood windrow burning that took place during the initial deforestation.

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