Earthworms, ants and other arthropods as soil health indicators in traditional and no-fire agro-ecosystems from Eastern Brazilian Amazonia

Autores/as

  • Guillaume Xavier Rousseau Graduate Program in Agroecology, Maranhão State University (UEMA), Cidade Universitária PauloVI S/N, Tirirical, São Luis-MA 65055-970, Brasil. Email: guilirous@yahoo.ca, rogeriobarrolandia@yahoo.com.br
  • Paulo Rogério Dos Santos Silva Graduate Program in Agroecology, Maranhão State University (UEMA), Cidade Universitária PauloVI S/N, Tirirical, São Luis-MA 65055-970, Brasil. Email: guilirous@yahoo.ca, rogeriobarrolandia@yahoo.com.br
  • Cláudio José Reis de Carvalho Embrapa Amazônia Oriental, Tv. Dr. Enéas Pinheiro s/n, Marco, 66095-100 Belém PA, Brazil. Email: carvalho@cpatu.embrapa.br

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21829/azm.2010.262882

Palabras clave:

Soil macrofauna, biodiversity, principal component analysis, soil quality, soil management

Resumen

Deforestation of the Amazonian rainforest and conversion to agriculture with the use of fire creates a mosaic of occupied lands and secondary forests. Considering the fundamental role of soil macrofauna and the lack of information about its resilience to deforestation, this study characterized the earthworms, ants and other soil arthropod communities in secondary forests of 40 and 20 years of age and in cropping system and pastures prepared with slash-and-burn or chop-and-mulch in the Brazilian Eastern Amazonia. Soil macrofauna was sampled according to the TSBF (Tropical Soil Biological and Fertility) methodology. Four sub-indices and one macrofauna soil health index were calculated using five principal component analyses. The macrofauna index identified better soil health in chop-andmulch crops, followed by the 40 yr-old forest and the chop-and-mulch pasture. These results confirmed the fundamental role of old secondary forests for soil biodiversity conservation and the potential of the chop-and-mulch technique to mitigate the effects of land use changes.

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Publicado

10-08-2010

Cómo citar

Xavier Rousseau, G., Dos Santos Silva, P. R., & Reis de Carvalho, C. J. (2010). Earthworms, ants and other arthropods as soil health indicators in traditional and no-fire agro-ecosystems from Eastern Brazilian Amazonia. ACTA ZOOLÓGICA MEXICANA (N.S.), 26(2), 117–134. https://doi.org/10.21829/azm.2010.262882
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