Watershed responses to Amazon soya bean cropland expansion and intensification

Author:

Neill Christopher12,Coe Michael T.34,Riskin Shelby H.2,Krusche Alex V.5,Elsenbeer Helmut6,Macedo Marcia N.34,McHorney Richard1,Lefebvre Paul3,Davidson Eric A.3,Scheffler Raphael6,Figueira Adelaine Michela e Silva5,Porder Stephen2,Deegan Linda A.1

Affiliation:

1. The Ecosystems Center, Marine Biological Laboratory, 7 MBL Street, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, PO Box G, Providence, RI 029122, USA

3. Woods Hole Research Center, 149 Woods Hole Road, Falmouth, MA 02540, USA

4. Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazônia, 66035-170 Belém, PA, Brazil

5. Centro de Energia Nuclear na Agricultura, University of São Paulo, Avenida Centenário, 303, Piracicaba, São Paulo Caixa Postal 1341 6000, Brazil

6. Institute of Earth and Environmental, University of Potsdam, Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 24–25, Potsdam-Golm 14476, Germany

Abstract

The expansion and intensification of soya bean agriculture in southeastern Amazonia can alter watershed hydrology and biogeochemistry by changing the land cover, water balance and nutrient inputs. Several new insights on the responses of watershed hydrology and biogeochemistry to deforestation in Mato Grosso have emerged from recent intensive field campaigns in this region. Because of reduced evapotranspiration, total water export increases threefold to fourfold in soya bean watersheds compared with forest. However, the deep and highly permeable soils on the broad plateaus on which much of the soya bean cultivation has expanded buffer small soya bean watersheds against increased stormflows. Concentrations of nitrate and phosphate do not differ between forest or soya bean watersheds because fixation of phosphorus fertilizer by iron and aluminium oxides and anion exchange of nitrate in deep soils restrict nutrient movement. Despite resistance to biogeochemical change, streams in soya bean watersheds have higher temperatures caused by impoundments and reduction of bordering riparian forest. In larger rivers, increased water flow, current velocities and sediment flux following deforestation can reshape stream morphology, suggesting that cumulative impacts of deforestation in small watersheds will occur at larger scales.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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