Semina: Ciências Agrárias (Mar 2017)

Effect of termite activity on soil under different land management strategies

  • Liane Barreto Alves Pinheiro,
  • Rodrigo Camara,
  • Marcos Gervasio Pereira,
  • Eduardo Lima,
  • Maria Elizabeth Fernandes Correia,
  • Cristiane Miranda Martins,
  • Everaldo Zonta,
  • Carlos Eduardo Gabriel Menezes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5433/1679-0359.2017v38n1p143
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38, no. 1
pp. 143 – 156

Abstract

Read online

Mound-building termites are important agents of soil bioperturbation, but these species have not been extensively studied thus far. The present study aimed to evaluate the soil particle-size and the chemical attributes of termite mounds and the surrounding soil under different land use strategies. A one-hectare plot was defined for an unmanaged degraded pasture, planted pasture, and for a eucalyptus Corymbia citriodora plantation. In each plot, the top, center, and base sections of five Cornitermes cumulans mounds, and the surrounding soil at the depths of 0-5; 5-10; 10-20 cm, were sampled in the Pinheiral, Rio de Janeiro state. In the three areas, the center of the mounds contained higher clay content, organic carbon, phosphorous, calcium and magnesium, total bases, and cation exchangeable capacity, when compared to the top, base, and the surrounding soils. However, the center had lower values of exchangeable acidity and potassium, of the three areas. In the eucalyptus plantation, the values of pH, total bases, calcium, and magnesium were lower, whereas aluminum, exchangeable acidity, sodium, and cation exchange capacity were higher both in the mounds and in the surrounding soil, in relation to the pastures. There were no differences among the three areas in terms of organic carbon, potassium, phosphorous, and total bases, in the mounds and adjacent soil. Thus, the termite activity altered the clay content and most of the soil chemical properties in all of the studied areas, but only for the center of the mounds. However, the effect of these organisms was different in the eucalyptus plantation in relation to the pasture areas.

Keywords