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Dep. of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Univ. of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78249-0661
* Corresponding author (janis.bush{at}utsa.edu).
Soil C and N were measured from a chronosequence of adjacent riparian forest sites located along the floodplain terrace of the San Antonio River. The communities were 25, 39, 45, 47, 49, and 53 yr past long-term farmland use. Four of these sites (25, 45, 49, and 53 yr old) were also sampled 20 yr ago. Soil C was significantly greater after 20 yr of community development; however, the increase was dependent on the community age. Soil C increased by 38 g kg–1 in the 49-yr-old community during the 20-yr period, but only 11 to 15 g kg–1 in the 25-, 45-, and 53-yr-old communities. Soil N was significantly greater (1.7–2.5 g kg–1) after 20 yr of development for communities 25, 45, and 49 yr old. In the oldest community (53 yr old), no significant increase was seen in soil N after 20 yr. No significant spatial differences [underneath the canopy of Acacia farnesiana (L.) Willd. vs. intercanopy grassland] were found in soil C and N in the 25-yr-old community. The late successional dominant Celtis laevigata Willd., total woody plant density, and total woody plant basal area could be explained by soil C or N. Changes in soil C and N through time parallel other studies, increasing through the early- and mid-successional stages and decreasing from the mid- to late-successional stages. Spatial differences in soil C and N that existed in the 15-yr-old community disappeared in the 25-yr-old community as A. farnesiana basal area increased from 0.7 to13 m2 ha–1.
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