I forwarded the ECOLOG-L discussion about fertilizing tropical soils to 
William Woods, Director of the Environmental Studies Program at the 
University of Kansas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, who studies soils in the Amazon 
valley.  Here is his response:
 
Without major amendments tropical soils are generally considered to offer 
poor prospects for agricultural development. Amazonian soils represent a 
textbook case. Soil quality equals destiny in many readings of Amazonia's 
past, present, and future. Yet in the past few decades archaeologists have 
uncovered evidence of large and complex prehistoric societies in Amazonian 
environments despite earlier consensus that such development was 
untenable. More recently, geographers have discovered that these sites 
coincide with fertile, dark soils termed "terra preta" that occur in a 
variety of landscape contexts and extents, from patches of less than a 
hectare to many square kilometers. It is now clear that these soils are 
anthropic in origin and represent fonts of local environmental knowledge 
and know-how with ancient roots and contemporary pan-tropical 
applications. An intriguing property is their apparent persistence, even 
after cultivation cessation ranging from decades to centuries and possibly 
millennia. Local people continue to generate these soils with skilled 
practices, including carbon amendments and microbial management. Both the 
soils and these practices are important agricultural resources within 
contemporary Amazonia. They provide a global model for developing long-
term future sustainability of food production in lowland tropical 
environments. They also constitute a significant reservoir for the short- 
and long-term sequestration of carbon.


----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, February 06, 2007 2:29 PM
Subject: Re: What would adding fertilizer do to a tropical forest?

In most tropical soils adding mineral fertilizers to soil is not likely to 
have much impact.  Since these soils have very low cation exchange 
capacity, cations, such as potassium, added to soils will be leached away 
very quickly.  Phosporus is most likely to be fixed as iron and alluminium 
phosphates and will not be available to plants.

Bob Mowbray
Tropical Forest Ecologist


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jonathan Adams" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, February 01, 2007 5:36 PM
Subject: What would adding fertilizer do to a tropical forest?

For a long time I've heard people talk about the effects of adding mineral 
fertilizers to grasslands - how it causes a crash in species richness.

Has anyone ever tried adding mineral fertilizer to tropical forest and 
studying (say) the species diversity of seedlings, or long term effects on 
regeneration?

It may be interesting from the point of view of understanding maintainance 
of species richness.

Examining effects on growth rate of tropical trees might also be relevant 
to the idea of setting up artificial forests for carbon sequestration.

     Jonathan Adams

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