Severity of topsoil compaction controls the impact of skid trails on soil ecological processes.
Abstract
Skid trails are a major management-induced disturbance in temperate forest ecosystems with considerable impact on soil ecological processes that are so far poorly understood. In German forests, skid trails comprise 10%-20% of the forest area that is potentially affected by soil compaction through heavy machinery. We systematically investigated the influence of skid trails on physical, chemical and microbiological soil parameters at 84 paired plots across four Central European forest types. In low mountain forests with steeper topography, skid trails had more drastic effects than in lowland forests. Skid trails in low mountain areas showed a decrease in the C to N ratio of microbial biomass (MBC/MBN), as well as increased microbial (MBC/SOC) and enzyme activities leading to faster carbon turnover (lower C/N, EOC/EN) and increased CO2 losses (CO2/SOC) from the soil. The overall effects of the skid trails in lowland forests were small. On base-poor soils, we found an increase in the MBC/MBN ratio, while skid trails in base-rich lowland soils showed a reduction in CO2/SOC, suggesting a proportional increase in soil carbon storage. Regardless of region-specific effects, the relative increase in the bulk density of the fine soil was identified as a 'golden trait' that determined the effects of skid trails on many soil parameters, as shown by negative correlations with SOC, N, MBC, MBN, MBP, MBC/SOC and CO2/SOC and positive ones with the activities of certain hydrolytic enzymes.
Key words
- topsoil
- soil compaction
- skidding
- forests
- forest soils
- soil types
- topography
- mountain areas
- carbon-nitrogen ratio
- microbial biomass
- soil enzymes
- enzyme activity
- carbon dioxide
- carbon
- lowland areas
- nitrogen
- organic carbon
- soil organic matter
- soil chemical properties
- soil respiration
- biological activity in soil
- slopes
- vehicles
- weather
- soil water
- soil physical properties
- frost