Belowground Carbon and Nitrogen on a Thinned and Un-Thinned Seasonally Dry Tropical Forest

Abstract

The aim of this study was to quantify the dynamics of herbaceous biomass and fine root productivity, and their relationship to stocks of carbon and nitrogen, in the Vertisols of two adjacent watersheds of a seasonally dry tropical forest (SDTF) under two different types of ground cover. The two watersheds are located in the county of Iguatu in the State of Ceará, Brazil. The control watershed of 2.1 ha, has been under regeneration for 35 years (RC35), while the second watershed (1.1 ha) was subjected to thinning for a period of 5 years (TC5). The sampled variables were herbaceous shoot biomass, fine roots, gravimetric moisture, the isotope δ13C (‰), total soil carbon (TSC) and total nitrogen (TN) in the 0 - 20, 20 - 40 and 40 - 60 cm layers, between April 2013 and March 2014. To quantify herbaceous shoot biomass, samples were taken monthly. For TSC and TN, the campaigns were held every two months. The data underwent analysis of means and were compared by t-test (p < 0.05). Under TC5, there was an increase in the stocks of TSC and TN of 151 and 137% respectively in the 40 - 60 cm layer, in relation to RC35. The implementation of thinning in a SDFT is seen as a management alternative to be considered in sustainability programs in the semi-arid region, contributing to maximising the production of herbaceous forage for feeding large and small ruminants, and for bee pasture, in addition to increasing the stock of carbon in the soil of SDFT and reducing global warming.

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do Nascimento Aquino, D., de Andrade, E.M., de Almeida Castanho, A.D., Pereira Júnior, L.R. and de Queiroz Palácio, H.A. (2017) Belowground Carbon and Nitrogen on a Thinned and Un-Thinned Seasonally Dry Tropical Forest. American Journal of Plant Sciences, 8, 2083-2100. doi: 10.4236/ajps.2017.89140.

1. Introduction

In the last few decades the scientific community has turned to the study of carbon stocks in many different compartments of tropical forests [1] [2] [3] , due to their being an important component of terrestrial carbon. However, the same cannot be said about seasonally dry tropical forest (SDTF) [4] [5] [6] , which cover an area of approximately 105.104 km2. Of this total, 54.2% are distributed over two large areas in South America [7] , with the most extensive, known as the Caatinga, in the northeast of Brazil. Over the centuries, the primary use of these forests has been for agriculture, timber and animal pasture [8] . The production of any of these components requires the practice of thinning in different degrees. The selective removal of trees and shrubs through thinning is used in order to improve the process of colonisation, reducing the competition for water, light and nutrients, and opening up space for the growth of small herbaceous species [9] [10] . The increased availability of herbaceous plants in SDFT has therefore been achieved through changes in the structure and architecture of the tree and shrub vegetation [11] [12] .

Early studies of thinning in SDFT were intended to identify managements which would give greater productivity of fibre and biomass [13] . Studies show that thinning promotes the emergence of an herbaceous layer [14] , enables water content in the soil [15] [16] [17] and can add biomass to the soil [18] [19] . However, there is little research that focuses on the significance of thinning on root biomass in the soil of a SDFT [4] [6] . Further, it should be noted that the SDFT located in the northeast of Brazil (approximately 900,000 km2) has been little investigated as to the dynamics of fine roots or shoot biomass [5] [20] [21] . Although thinning is a very common practice in the region, there is still no research into the effect of thinning on the stock of carbon and nitrogen in the soil.

To monitor the quality of the soil, so that changes in the management systems adopted by farmers may be suggested in time to prevent degradation of the dry region [22] , it is necessary to define environmental attributes that can be easily measured [23] . In this respect, determination of the total soil carbon (TSC) and total nitrogen (TN) can unanimously be found in the literature as key indicators of soil quality [24] [25] , both in agricultural systems and areas of native vegetation [26] [27] . It is believed that the stock of TSC and TN in the soil of a fragment of a SDFT subjected to thinning is lower than under regeneration for 35 years of ecological succession. Given the above, the aim of this study was to quantify the dynamics of herbaceous biomass and fine-root productivity, and their relationship to changes in the stock of TSC and TN in the soil of a SDFT under two different types of land use in the northeast of Brazil.

2. Materials and Methods

The semi-arid region of northeastern Brazil is characterised by high population density, comprising approximately 27 million people in an area of 982,563 km2. Different types of vegetation develop in the region, predominantly caatinga, a type of seasonally dry tropical forests (SDTF), with an area of 844,453 km2.

2.1. Experimental Area

The study was carried out in two watersheds (6˚23'44''S; 39˚15'24''W), in county of Iguatu in the State of Ceará, Brazil (Figure 1). The watersheds are adjacent and under different types of land use, RC35 (SDFT under regeneration for 35 years) and TC5 (SDFT under thinning for 5 years), with an area of 2.1 and 1.1 ha, and an average slope of 10.6% and 8.7% respectively. Both have a second-order drainage course and ephemeral water regime.

The vegetation in the study area is mostly made up of hyperxerophilic seasonally dry tropical forests (SDTF) (steppe-like savannah), deciduous, with a large variety of thorny species in secondary ecological succession. The following species predominate in the area: Aspidosperma pyrifolium, Commiphora leptophloeos (Mart.) J. B. Gillett, and Mimosa caesalpiniaefolia Benth, (Combretum leprosum and Piptadenia stipulacea). The predominant vegetation unit is a medium SDTF, with arboreal layers of variable density, and individuals with an average height of from 7 to 15 m. The climate in the region is hot semi-arid, with an aridity index of 0.44, i.e. semi-arid. The region is also characterised by high potential evaporation (1988 mm∙year−1), with higher values during the seven months of less rainfall (June to December). The average historical rainfall for the town of Iguatu is 864 ± 304 mm (average for 1932-2013). Temporal distribution of the rainfall shows 85% to be concentrated from January to May, of which around 30% is recorded in March. Average annual temperature for the region is 27˚C.

Figure 1. Location of the experimental watersheds showing the management of SDFT under regeneration (RC35) and thinning (TC5).

2.1.1. History of Land Occupation

With relation to the history of land occupation, before 1980 the areas of both experimental watersheds were used for the cultivation of subsistence species, specifically maize (Zea mays L.) and cotton (Gossypium L), and have been maintained in various stages of recovery and succession since that time. The RC35 management represents natural vegetation under regeneration for about 35 years, while TC5 was submitted to thinning in December of 2008, 2010 and 2012. Thinning consisted of removing those plants where the diameter of the stem was less than 0.10 m at breast height, while herbaceous-sized plants and the organic residue of the thin branches from thinning were left in place. It should be noted that throughout the experiment there was no grazing in either of the experimental watershed. To determine the variables being investigated, fifty 10 × 10 m sample units were distributed across the main course in both watersheds, RC35 and TC5, marked out and identified in loco with metal plates according to [28] methodology.

2.1.2. Rainfall

Rainfall data were measured on 5-min intervals in an automatic weather station, from which rainfall depth (P) was obtained. Of the total rainfall, 61% was recorded over three months, expressing high temporal variability, with a dry period or a period of low rainfall between July and December (Figure 2). The rainfalls were concentrated from April to Jun 2013 and from January to March 2014, while the period from August to December was characterized as dry. Any month with a rainfall below 50 mm was considered to be dry [29] . Information on soil temperature in both areas was recorded every 4 hours at a depth of 10 cm, employing Hobo Pendant® model 64K-UA-002-64 Temperature/Light sensors. The

Figure 2. Rainfall (mm) and the mean monthly temperature (˚C) of the soil (10 cm).

highest soil temperatures in the 10 cm layer coincided with the dry period, reaching an average in October of 40˚C and 36.6˚C in TC5 and RC35 respectively.

2.1.3. Soil Characteristics

The soil of both areas was classified as a Vertisol, with a predominance of group 2:1 expansive clay minerals, particularly montmorillonite. As regards the physicochemical properties of the soil, it can be seen that both managements had soils of similar characteristics (Table 1). The pH tends towards neutral, ranging between 6.7 and 6.9, and the texture is silty loam, with the exception of the 0 - 20 cm layer present in TC5. The soil density of the soil showed little variation, the highest values being recorded in the 40 - 60 cm layer of RC35, with values of 1.50 g∙cm−3.

2.2. Herbaceous Biomass

Sampling to quantify the production of herbaceous shoot biomass was carried out monthly, with 10 replications for each management (RC35 and TC5) from April 2013 to March 2014, following the methodology presented by [28] . The herbaceous material from the ten sampling units was weighed and shredded while still fresh, and then reduced to an aliquot of 500 g/sample unit. To get the air-dry weight, samples were dried in a forced air circulation oven at 60˚C - 70˚C and weighed on an analytical balance with a precision of 0.01 g.

2.3. Fine roots Biomass

To determine fine-root biomass (< 2 mm), the methodology proposed by [30] was followed. To extract the fine roots, a hollow cylindrical aluminum probe with an internal diameter of 4.5 cm was used. The samples were taken from the 0 - 10, 10 - 20 and 20 - 30 cm layers in June (rainy season) and November (dry season), in five randomly selected sampling units for each management.

2.4. Soil Moisture, Total Soil Carbon and Total Nitrogen

To quantify the levels of soil moisture, total soil carbon (TSC) and total nitrogen

Table 1. Soil density, pH and particle size characteristics in managements of regenerating (RC35) and thinned (CR5) SDFT.

(TN) in the soil, collections were made every two months, from April 2013 to March 2014, in the 0 - 20, 20 - 40 and 40 - 60 cm layers of five randomly selected sampling units for each management. The soil collected from each layer was then homogenised into compound samples and sent for further laboratory analysis. TSC was determined with the aid of a Total Organic Carbon Analyser, TOC-V, coupled to an SSM-5000A Solid Sample Module. The stock of TSC was calculated following the equation proposed by [31] , while TN was determined from an expression adopted by [32] .

(1)

where TSC or TN is the carbon or nitrogen stock (Mg∙ha−1); Tc or Tn is the measured total organic carbon or total nitrogen in the sampled soil layer (g∙kg−1); Ds is soil bulk density in the sampled soil layer (g∙cm−3); e is the depth of the soil layer (cm).

2.5. Carbon Isotopes (δ13C)

In order to understand the actual contribution of plants with a C3 and C4 metabolism to carbon formation in the two managements being investigated, the stable carbon 13 isotopes (δ13C) were quantified. To do this, soil was collected from ten randomised sampling units at the 0 - 20, 20 - 40 and 40 - 60 cm layers in each management (RC35 and TC5), giving a total of 30 samples for each type of land use. The analyses were carried out by combustion of the samples under a continuous flow of helium in an elemental analyser (Carlo Erba, CHN-1110) coupled to a Thermo Finnigan Delta Plus mass spectrometer. The enrichment or depletion of the 13C isotopic species was measured against a standard, and expressed in “delta permil” [33] .

(2)

where R is the carbon isotope ratio (13C/12C) in the sample and in the standard. The standard for carbon is the PDB. Measurement accuracy is ±0.3‰.

2.6. Statistical Analyses

Mean data for soil temperature, herbaceous shoot dry matter, fine root dry matter, total carbon and total nitrogen, as well as carbon 13 isotope (δ13C), were subjected to an analysis of means test, to find out the effects of sampling months, soil depth and soil moisture, management regimes and their interactive effects on fine root biomass and TSC and TN. Mean differences were considered significant when p < 0.05 to t-test.

3. Results

3.1. Herbaceous Biomass

Herbaceous dry biomass (Figure 3) was significantly affected by the manage-

Figure 3. Dry herbaceous biomass (Mg∙ha−1) in the RC35 (n = 120) and TC5 (n = 120) managements. The same letters within each month do not differ statistically by t-test (p > 0.05).

ment of the tree and shrub species at a level of 5% significance. The TC5 area displayed greater productivity for herbaceous dry matter, with an annual mean stock of approximately 1.2 Mg∙ha−1 (±0.7 Mg∙ha−1) compared with the 0.9 Mg∙ha−1 (±0.5 Mg∙ha−1) found in RC35. During the rainy months, from April to July 2013 and February 2014, the production of herbaceous dry biomass in the TC5 was statistically higher than that seen in the RC35 (p = 0.001), reaching a peak in February 2014, of approximately 2.3 Mg∙ha−1 (Figure 3). However, still with reference to Figure 3, during the dry period (August to November 2013), with the exception of November, no statistical difference was seen (p > 0.05) in the stock of dry matter between the managements being investigated. Unlike that seen in TC5, the herbaceous dry matter in RC35 showed few fluctuations (Figure 3), giving a total stock of 1.2 Mg∙ha−1 in April 2013, and 1.3 Mg∙ha−1 in March 2014.

Although during the rainy period, the stock of herbaceous dry matter in the TC5 was significantly higher (p ≤ 0.05) than in the RC35 (Figure 4), during the dry period, no statistical difference was recorded. On the other hand, a comparison between the periods identified that the stock which occurred during the rainy period (1.4 Mg∙ha−1) was statistically greater than in the dry period (1.0 Mg∙ha−1). It can therefore be said that the TC5 management expresses a greater sensitivity to the rainfall regime of the region.

3.2. Fine Root Biomass

From investigation of the stock of dry fine-root biomass between the dry and

Figure 4. Dry herbaceous biomass (Mg∙ha−1) during the rainy and dry seasons. The same lowercase letter within a period, and uppercase letter between inter-management period, do not differ statistically by t-test (p > 0.05).

rainy seasons, it was identified that in the RC35 only the 20 - 30 cm layer (Figure 5(a)) did not show a statistical difference (p = 0.530).

For the entire layer (0 - 30 cm), the stock was 6.5 Mg∙ha−1 and 5.6 Mg∙ha−1 respectively, with a decrease of only 0.9 Mg∙ha−1 (12.5%) between the rainy and dry seasons of 2013. The greatest quantities of dry fine-root biomass in RC35 were found during the rainy period in the 0 - 10 cm layer (3.5 Mg∙ha−1). However, during this period, this layer stored only half the quantity of fine roots found in the TC5 (Figure 5(b)). The stock of dry fine-root biomass in TC5 during the rainy period showed no significant differences (p > 0.05) between layers. Whereas during the dry period, a significant reduction in the stock of fine-root biomass was registered between layers (Figure 5(b)). Summing the stocks of dry fine-root biomass occurring in the three layers gives approximately 21.2 Mg∙ha−1 and 14.6 Mg∙ha−1 for the rainy and dry periods respectively. This decrease is equal to a reduction of 6.5 Mg∙ha−1 (30.9%) in only 6 months.

3.3. Soil Moisture

Throughout the profile being analysed, the RC35 management displayed values for moisture that were always lower than those quantified in TC5 (Figure 6). A reduction in moisture can be seen with depth for the RC35 management, while TC5 maintained the moisture level throughout the profile. The greatest difference for soil moisture between the two managements was recorded in the 40 - 60 cm layer, which differed statistically (p ≤ 0.05). For the 0 - 20 cm level, the TC5

(a) (b)

Figure 5. Dry fine-root biomass (Mg∙ha−1) present in the soil depth profile of the RC35 (a) (n = 30) and TC5 (b) (n = 30) managements. The same lowercase letters within a depth, and uppercase letters between periods (wet, dry), do not differ statistically by t-test (p > 0.05).

Figure 6. Mean moisture content of the soil profile. The same lowercase letters within a depth, and uppercase letters between managements do not differ statistically by t-test (p > 0.05).

management displayed a mean moisture content of about 18%, which did not differ statistically (p > 0.05) from the RC35 (16%). The greatest values for temporal variability were recorded in the surface layer (0 - 20 cm), with deviations of 8% in TC5 and 7% in RC35 (Figure 6).

3.4. Total Soil Carbon and Total Nitrogen

The stock of Total Soil Carbon (TSC) and Total Nitrogen (TN) in both managements (Figure 7(a) and Figure 7(b)) showed no significant difference (p > 0.05) in the 0 - 20 cm soil layer. However, for the remaining layers, the TC5 exceeded RC35 with respect to the stocks of TSC and TN (p ≤ 0.05). Moreover, it is important to note that the thinned vegetation is able to maintain a homogeneous stock of carbon throughout the soil depth profile, with values of 36.4 Mg∙ha1 (0 - 20 cm), 29.9 Mg∙ha1 (20 - 40 cm) and 29.2 Mg∙ha1 (40 - 60 cm) (Figure 7(a)). In the surface layer (0 - 20 cm), the value for TSC in the RC35 was on average 30.2 Mg∙ha1, being significantly (p ≤ 0.05) higher than in the other layers (Figure 7(a)).

3.5. Carbon Isotopes (δ13C)

In relation to the source of carbon in both managements, the values for δ13C were predominant in TC5 (p = 0.01), ranging from −22.6‰ to −18.5‰ for the 0

(a) (b)

Figure 7. Stocks of TSC (a) and TN (b) in the soil profile of the RC35 (n = 105) and TC5 (105) managements from April 2013 to March 2014. The same lowercase letters within a depth, and uppercase letters between watersheds (RC35, TC5) did not differ statistically by t-test (p > 0.05).

- 20 and 40 - 60 cm layers respectively (Figure 8). Further, the smallest variations in the values of δ13C occurred in the 0 - 20 cm layer of the RC35 manage ment. Moreover, in this layer, the predominance of carbon, input from species with a C3 metabolic cycle, should be noted, i.e. arising from the residue of woody species. It can further be seen that the TC5 management showed greater heterogeneity in δ13C values, and that in the deepest layer (40 - 60 cm) there are significant increases in carbon from C4 species (tropical grasses), thereby differing statistically from the RC35 (p = 0.015).

4. Discussion

4.1. Herbaceous Biomass

In the RC35, herbaceous biomass was little influenced by annual rainfall variability (Figure 3 and Figure 4). However, when the natural ground cover conditions were altered by the technique of thinning, significant differences in the production of dry biomass between the rainy and dry seasons became possible. As the vegetative stages in the phenological cycle of the species are short [4] , within just two months from the end of the rains there is a significant reduction in the stock of dry matter in the vegetation, especially in the TC5. However, the occurrence of even small rainfall depths (66 mm) recorded during October and November, promoted the recovery of the net primary production in December (Figure 2 and Figure 3). This recovery is more significant in the TC5, differing statistically from RC35 due to the greater abundance of herbaceous species, a result of thinning.

Figure 8. Contribution of C3 and C4 plants to stocks of C in the soil profile of the RC35 (n = 30) and TC5 (n = 30) managements. The same lowercase letters within a depth, and uppercase letters between managements (RC35, TC5), do not differ statistically by t-test (p > 0.05).

The greater availability of biomass in thinned area can be verified at the end of the rainy season, with high variability in the stock of dry biomass. A difference of more than 500% can occur between successive seasons [11] . The reduction in herbaceous dry matter in the TC5 area during the dry season is a result of the dormancy and/or senescence of the individuals (Figure 3 and Figure 4), promoted by a reduction in soil moisture. The surface layer expressed the greatest temporal variability for moisture (Figure 6), this being due to the flow of moisture exchange between the soil and the atmosphere by the process of evaporation as presented by [16] .

The mean availability of dry biomass from the herbaceous vegetation in a SDTF ranges from 1.5 to 4.0 Mg∙ha−1 [5] [11] . Such variations are conditioned by local characteristics, especially ground cover by woody plants, and the time of evaluation [6] [18] . In SDTF, the technique of thinning transfers the production of biomass from the shrubs and trees to the herbaceous layer by an increase in grass and herbaceous dicot species [13] .

According to the conceptual model of the main factors that control density in herbaceous species, proposed by [12] , the factor of light penetration to the soil surface is more important than the fertility of the habitat itself. Therefore, greater availability in the flow of solar energy to be used in the photosynthetic process of the herbaceous layer located below the canopy of a forest subjected to thinning, contributes to an increase in biomass and fine roots, and consequently to the levels of organic matter in the soil.

4.2. Fine Root Biomass

The studies have shown that the concentration of fine roots throughout the soil profile in the TC5 only differed statistically between the rainy and dry seasons in the 20 - 30 cm layer. This is explained by the heterogeneous distribution of roots throughout the profile during the dry season (Figure 5(b)). For the same management, the largest stock of fine roots during the dry season was concentrated in the 0 - 10 cm layer, with approximately 8.3 Mg∙ha−1. This increased concentration in the surface layer is due to a shortening of the roots by the death of the apical zone [4] [21] , or by a water deficit in the SDTF during the dry season. However, during the rainy period there was greater homogeneity in the concentration of fine roots along the vertical depth, with no significant difference (p > 0.05) (Figure 5(b)). Although each type of vegetation has a different root architecture, use of the root to shoot ratio has been widely used to estimate the quantity of root biomass for the purposes of carbon accounting [20] . To this effect, several researchers have defended the use of allometric equations to estimate root and shoot biomass [6] [23] [34] .

Therefore, it is expected with this study to find a greater correlation between the shoot biomass of herbaceous plants with the stock of fine roots. A higher root to shoot ratio in pasture, compared with forests or other woody vegetation, was found by [23] . Given the above, it can be inferred that the decrease in herbaceous shoot dry matter in the TC5 during the dry months of August to November (Figure 3 and Figure 4), a result of low rainfall and of the consequent reduction in soil moisture, is contributing to the death and subsequent reduction of fine-root biomass throughout the soil profile, which was not evident in the 20 - 30 cm layer of TC5 or the 0 - 10 cm layer of TC5 (Figure 5(a) and Figure 5(b)), respectively.

Therefore, after the end of the rainy period, there is a significant increase in organic residue in the soil from the death and rupturing of the fine roots of grasses and herbaceous legumes. The vegetation returns nutrients to the soil through the circulation of matter [34] , represented by the deposition of litter and death of the roots, especially the fine roots. The greater distribution of fine roots in the soil profile with a predominance of herbaceous grasses makes possible the increase and release, by root exudation or decomposition, of soluble compounds, which are easily decomposable and usable as an energy source by microorganisms [25] .

4.3. Total Soil Carbon and Total Nitrogen

The stock of carbon in the roots of SDTF forests around the world varies between 17 and 31 Mg∙ha−1 [5] [24] [35] , values below those found in tropical rainforests (36 to 68 Mg∙ha−1) [36] . In the SDTF of northeastern Brazil, one of the few works developed in this biome on fine roots biomass found average values of 2.4 Mg∙ha−1∙year−1 [37] . This is an intermediate value to those found in the RC35 (3.3 Mg∙ha−1 and 1.7 Mg∙ha−1), but well below those found in TC5 (21.2 Mg∙ha−1 and 14.6 Mg∙ha−1), for the rainy and dry seasons respectively.

Net amounts of TSC and TN in the 0 - 20 cm layer, regardless of ground cover, showed the highest temporal variability when compared to the other two layers, there being no statistical difference between the managements under study in the surface layer (Figure 7). The greater stocks of carbon seen in the 10-20 cm and 20 - 30 cm layers of soil in the TC5 compared to RC35 (Figure 7(a)), are a result of the accumulation of organic residue mainly input after the death of the fine roots (Figure 5). Fine roots are the major suppliers of carbon to the soil when they die and decompose in large quantities during the dry season [4] . Carbon input to the soil is mainly due to the products of fine-root decomposition [6] to the illuviation of organic compounds from the decomposition of plant residues deposited on the soil [1] , and to material incorporated by the movement of the macro and mesofauna [18] .

Another factor that may have contributed to maintaining greater levels of carbon in the subsurface layers of the TC5 is based on the fact that herbaceous vegetation reduced surface runoff and increased the chances of infiltration [17] . The greater infiltration opportunity time in the TC5 management [15] contributed to an increase in moisture throughout the depth profile (Figure 6), and to growth of the root system of the herbaceous plants [10] , as well as contributing with higher rates of carbon and nitrogen illuviation at greater depths in relation to RC35.

The concentrations of TSC in RC35 and of TN in both managements decreased with depth (Figure 6(a) and Figure 7(b)). It is known that the greater stocks of these elements at the soil surface, show an imminent risk of large amounts of CO2 being released from the soil surface to the atmosphere if land use is changed to managements of intense mobilisation and turning of the soil [38] . A greater accumulation of TSC and TN in the surface layer of the soil has been identified in different parts of the world [3] [5] [6] [39] [40] [41] . Carbon stocks in the 0 - 20 cm layer of RC35 (30 Mg∙ha−1) and TC5 (40 Mg∙ha−1) are within the range of values found in soils of the Brazilian semi-arid region, from 20 to 48.4 Mg∙ha−1 [27] ; of the Amazon region, at a depth of 30 cm, of 30 to 60 Mg∙ha−1 [26] and of the Brazilian Cerrado, 38.7 Mg∙ha−1 [22] .

4.4. Carbon Isotopes (δ13C)

The source of the carbon present in each management (Figure 8) confirms observations made in the field regarding the use and occupation of the area being investigated. The significant enrichment of δ13C with depth in the soil under the RC35 management shows that the site has been under different types of land use in the past. The local community reports that 35 years earlier, both areas had been historically intended for the cultivation of maize. The most likely hypothesis therefore is that the carbon at subsurface depths (20 - 40 and 40 - 60 cm) in RC35 is a remnant of old humidified organic matter from previous vegetation which was richer in δ13C than today. Similar behaviour was found by [42] in studies on reforestation with leguminous trees. Managements of monocropped corn, regardless of soil type, contributed with higher values for δ13C throughout the profile [41] , where the values for δ13C range from −9‰ to −19‰, with a mean of −13‰ [43] .

The slight enrichment of δ13C values at greater depths in RC35 (Figure 8) may even be associated with the decomposition of organic substrates, which would involve a normal isotopic effect, i.e. microbial products become more enriched in δ13C than do substrates [44] . Another possible cause of this variability lies in the fact that with humidification, the values for δ13C tend to increase over time [42] .

Changes in ground cover due to the practice of thinning, and the consequent increase in the population of tropical grasses, contributed to an increase in organic waste from plant species with a C4 metabolic cycle, at lower depths (40 - 60 cm) of TC5 area (Figure 8). Therefore, the hypothesis of the recent increase in carbon from organic waste being input to the soil organic matter in the thinned area by the death and rupturing of the fine roots of grasses is proven, as shown in Figure 5(b). Researchers such as [40] found mean values for δ13C equal to −27‰ in areas of forest under regeneration, being within the range (−22‰ to −34‰) corresponding to C3 plants [45] ; whereas in areas of pasture, the values found are higher (a mean of −22‰), close to those found in the present study, indicating enrichment of δ13C from the organic material of the grasses.

However, unlike RC35, in addition to the old source, the area subjected to thinning shows a significant increase in more recent sources of δ13C at lower depths (Figure 8). This result is consistent with studies by [46] , who found that the introduction of brachiaria grass (Brachiaria decumbens), a plant with C4 metabolism, in managed pasture which replaced a forested area of cerrado, altered the isotopic signature of the soil carbon to less negative values, between −15.26‰ and −17.58‰.

5. Conclusion

This work points to the implementation of thinning in a SDTF emerging as a management alternative to be considered in sustainability programs in the semi-arid region, contributing to maximizing the production of herbaceous forage for feeding large and small ruminants, and for bee pasture, in addition to increasing the stock of carbon in the soil of SDTF and can help to reduce global warming The management of thinning (TC5) contributes to greater stocks of TSC and total NT in the soil of a sazonally dry tropical forest, when compared to the reference area (area under regeneration for 35 years). Stocks of herbaceous dry biomass in the area under TC5 were greater during the rainy season. Under RC35 management, stocks remain constant regardless of the time of year. The increase in herbaceous cover influenced soil moisture dynamics, the increased humidity allowing fine roots to penetrate to a greater depth. This favoured an increase in carbon throughout the soil profile, originating from the organic residue of vegetable species with a C4 metabolic cycle (tropical grasses). Despite having smaller amounts of shoot biomass, values for the stocks of carbon and nitrogen in the soil found in this study are close to those seen in other Brazilian biomes, such as the Cerrado and the Amazon Rainforest.

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to thank Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) and Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) for their financial support of this research.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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