Assessing the occurrence of soil improvement and its relationship to the dominant life form in the high mountains of Central Spain

Magaña Ugarte, Rosina ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0628-3251, Gavilán García, Rosario ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1022-445X and Rubio Sánchez, Agustín ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1021-5203 (2024). Assessing the occurrence of soil improvement and its relationship to the dominant life form in the high mountains of Central Spain. "Geoderma Regional", v. 36 ; https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geodrs.2023.e00744.

Descripción

Título: Assessing the occurrence of soil improvement and its relationship to the dominant life form in the high mountains of Central Spain
Autor/es:
Tipo de Documento: Artículo
Título de Revista/Publicación: Geoderma Regional
Fecha: Marzo 2024
Volumen: 36
Materias:
ODS:
Escuela: E.T.S.I. Montes, Forestal y del Medio Natural (UPM)
Departamento: Sistemas y Recursos Naturales
Licencias Creative Commons: Reconocimiento - Sin obra derivada - No comercial

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Resumen

Soil in mountainous regions is vital to the health and preservation of these unique and diverse ecosystems. In dry and semi-arid regions, vegetation patches play a crucial role in soil nutrient heterogeneity through continuous feedback with soils, acting as barriers to collect runoff water, sediments, and nutrients from bare soil regions. Soil amelioration, an enhancement of soil biogeochemical processes, results in the formation of “fertility islands,” the extent of which is contingent on the plant species in question, as well as nutrient dynamics and water availability. Here, we collected soil from across a two-peak altitudinal gradient in the Sierra de Guadarrama high-mountains, each peak featuring a different dominant vegetation type (herbs vs. cushion-like) to compare soil nutrients and properties between bare soil and vegetation-covered patches (microhabitats). Soil improvement was assessed in the microhabitats using the Relative Interaction Index (RII). Fertility islands were shown to be prevalent in highmountain ecosystems, as soil quality and properties were higher beneath vegetation-covered regions than bare soils. There was a difference in RIIs between the transects, with greater soil improvement in the cushiondominated transect than the herb-dominated one. Changes in nutrient levels were unrelated to patch successional stage, indicaing that plant generations may not shape the spatial variability of soil attributes. Instead, species variety or the presence of dominant clonal species increased soil nutrients and aggregate stability, highlighting the importance of root shape and high biomass in nutrient retention and soil reinforcement. Finally, our findings imply that the poor, shallow soils in the examined peaks, in comparison to other mountains, may account for the poor facilitative interactions. Competition for the scarce resources at these peaks may intensify as climate warms. Thus, while these plants may grow with minimum assistance under current climate circumstances, their associations may be especially vulnerable to climate change.

Proyectos asociados

Tipo
Código
Acrónimo
Responsable
Título
Comunidad de Madrid
S2018/EMT-4338
Sin especificar
Sin especificar
Sin especificar
Gobierno de España
AGL2016-77863-R
Sin especificar
Sin especificar
Sin especificar

Más información

ID de Registro: 92444
Identificador DC: https://oa.upm.es/92444/
Identificador OAI: oai:oa.upm.es:92444
URL Portal Científico: https://portalcientifico.upm.es/es/ipublic/item/10148742
Identificador DOI: 10.1016/j.geodrs.2023.e00744
URL Oficial: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/...
Depositado por: Dr. Agustín Rubio Sánchez
Depositado el: 18 Dic 2025 09:53
Ultima Modificación: 18 Dic 2025 09:53