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1 September 2009 Effect on Soil Properties of Conversion of Yellow River Delta Ecosystems
Min Yang, Shiliang Liu, Zhifeng Yang, Tao Sun, Stephen Daniel DeGloria, Kathleen Holt
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Abstract

Using remote sensing and geographic information system technologies, we analyzed changes in ecosystem boundary conditions in the Yellow River Delta. We investigated variations in soil water, bulk density, total nitrogen, total phosphorus, and organic matter, as well as concentrations of soluble Ca2 , K , Mg2 and Na , under different ecosystem conversions. Results indicated that from 1992 to 2006, boundary characteristics became more complicated and ecosystem conversion was mainly from farmland to a mixed ecosystem supporting Tamarix chinensis-Phragmites communis. These ecosystem conversions may be attributed to a combination of urban expansion, oil exploration and extraction, water interception, and soil salinization. Ecosystem conversion also affected soil properties. Organic matter differed among the ecosystems, as did the concentrations of the soil base cations. Ca2 concentration was higher than concentrations of other cations, and significant differences existed in Ca2 and Mg2 concentrations among ecosystems. While the concentration of K and Mg2 showed similar concentrations, mostly increasing, among different ecosystem conversions, Na concentrations decreased. In summary, the concentrations of soluble minerals were significantly influenced by ecosystem conversions.

Min Yang, Shiliang Liu, Zhifeng Yang, Tao Sun, Stephen Daniel DeGloria, and Kathleen Holt "Effect on Soil Properties of Conversion of Yellow River Delta Ecosystems," Wetlands 29(3), 1014-1022, (1 September 2009). https://doi.org/10.1672/08-168.1
Received: 23 July 2008; Accepted: 1 May 2009; Published: 1 September 2009
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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KEYWORDS
boundary characteristics
ecosystem conversion
soil chemistry
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