Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Randriamalala J.R., Hervé Dominique, Letourmy P., Carrière Stéphanie M.. (2015). Effects of slash-and-burn practices on soil seed banks in secondary forest successions in Madagascar. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, 199, p. 312-319. ISSN 0167-8809.

Titre du document
Effects of slash-and-burn practices on soil seed banks in secondary forest successions in Madagascar
Année de publication
2015
Type de document
Article
Auteurs
Randriamalala J.R., Hervé Dominique, Letourmy P., Carrière Stéphanie M.
Source
Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, 2015, 199, p. 312-319 ISSN 0167-8809
Forest seed bank assessments are scarce in Madagascar and thus little is known about the relationships between the seed banks and vegetation dynamics on which secondary succession processes rely. The objective of this paper is to analyse the effects of slash-and-burn agriculture on soil seed banks and their dynamics along secondary forest successions. The aim of this work is to determine the effects of agricultural practices (cropping duration, tillage regime and fallow age) on seed bank density (SBD) and diversity (SBSR) during secondary succession periods (<25 years). Cropping duration was divided into three classes: (i) short (1–2 years), (ii) medium (3–5 years) and (iii) long (6–11 years). Tillage regime during crop successions was divided into three categories: (1) no tillage (only direct sowing is observed), (2) light tillage (after direct sowing, local shallow tillage is observed) and (3) heavy tillage (after direct sowing followed by light tillage practice, complete tillage practice is observed). Fifteen fallows subdivided into three regrowth age classes (2–6, 10–12 and 14–22 years) were surveyed. Fallow age is the main driver of SBD and SBSR: they increase with fallow age, regardless of cropping duration and tillage regime. SBD and SBSR recovery always occurs but is slower under long cropping duration (3–11 years) and heavy tillage regime because cropping duration helps to maintain a high level of wind-dispersed seeds during secondary succession and tillage regime contributes to reducing the proportion of viable seeds.
Plan de classement
Ecosystèmes [082ECOSYS] ; Milieu rural, sociologie rurale, systèmes agraires, foncier rural [098RURAL1]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010063199]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010063199
Contact