SPATIAL VARIABILITY OF SOIL ACTUAL AND POTENTIAL ACIDITY IN THE MANGROVE AGROECOSYSTEM OF WEST-AFRICA

Citation
M. Sylla et al., SPATIAL VARIABILITY OF SOIL ACTUAL AND POTENTIAL ACIDITY IN THE MANGROVE AGROECOSYSTEM OF WEST-AFRICA, Soil Science Society of America journal, 60(1), 1996, pp. 219-229
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Soil Science
ISSN journal
03615995
Volume
60
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
219 - 229
Database
ISI
SICI code
0361-5995(1996)60:1<219:SVOSAA>2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
Spatial variability of soil acidity in coastal lowlands results from a complex interaction of climate, coastal morphology, river hydrology, vegetation, landform, and tidal flooding. This study was conducted to determine whether the causal factors of soil acidification can be rela ted to soil total actual acidity (TAA) and total potential acidity (TP A) in 12 sites selected along four river basins in West Africa. A hier archical framework was designed corresponding to the scale at which ea ch factor has the greatest influence on acidification. In the dry seas on of 1991, soil samples to be analyzed for TAA and TPA were taken fro m three strips within each river basin, perpendicular to the river at different distances from the mouth, following a 40 by 20 m grid, at fi ve soil depths. The contribution of the different causal factors of ac idity spatial variability was analyzed with a nested analysis of varia nce (ANOVA) and related to the hierarchical framework. Geostatistics w ere used to study spatial variability at the most detailed scale. We d efined main ecoregions identified between watersheds at the macroscale , subenvironments identified with distance from the river mouth within watersheds, and zones identified with positions within toposequences. Practical implications for water management in acid sulfate were deve loped. At the macroscale, a broad subdivision of the study area into t wo ecoregions was possible, at the mesoscale, site position along rive rs significantly predicted a river-dependent longitudinal variability of soil acidity, whereas at the microscale, kriged maps showed differe nt patterns of soil acidity.