María Almagro
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by María Almagro.
Plant and Soil | 2012
María Almagro; M. Martínez-Mena
AimsPlant litter decomposition plays an important role in the storage of soil organic matter in terrestrial ecosystems. Conversion of native vegetation to agricultural lands and subsequent land abandonment can lead to shifts in canopy structure, and consequently influence decomposition dynamics by alterations in soil temperature and moisture conditions, solar radiation exposure, and soil erosion patterns. This study was conducted to assess which parameters were more closely related to short-term decomposition dynamics of two predominant Mediterranean leaf litter types.MethodsUsing the litterbag technique, we incubated leaf litter of Pinus halepensis and Rosmarinus officinalis in two Mediterranean land-uses with different degree of vegetation cover (open forest, abandoned agricultural field).ResultsFresh local litter lost between 20 and 55% of its initial mass throughout the 20-month incubation period. Rosemary litter decomposed faster than pine litter, showing net N immobilization in the early stages of decomposition, in contrast to the net N release exhibited by pine litter. Parameters related to litter quality (N content or C:N) or land-use/site conditions (ash content, an index of soil deposition on litter) were found to explain the cross-site variability in mass loss rates for rosemary and Aleppo pine litter, respectively.ConclusionsThe results from this study suggest that decomposition drivers may differ depending on litter type in this Mediterranean ecosystem. While rosemary litter was degraded mainly by microbial activity, decomposition of pine litter was likely driven primarily by abiotic processes like soil erosion.
Biogeosciences Discussions | 2018
M. Martínez-Mena; María Almagro; Noelia Garcia-Franco; Joris de Vente; Eloisa García; Carolina Boix Fayos
The role of fluvial sedimentary areas as organic carbon sinks remains largely unquantified. Little is known about mechanisms of organic carbon (OC) stabilization in alluvial sediments in semiarid and subhumid catchments where those mechanisms are quite complex because sediments are often redistributed and exposed to a range of environmental conditions in intermittent and perennial fluvial courses within the same catchment. The main goal of this study was to evaluate the contribution of transport and depositional areas as sources or sinks of CO2 at the catchment scale. We used physical and chemical organic matter fractionation techniques and basal respiration rates in samples representative of the three phases of the erosion process within the catchment: (i) detachment, representing the main sediment sources from forests and agricultural upland soils, as well as fluvial lateral banks; (ii) transport, representing suspended load and bedload in the main channel; and (iii) depositional areas along the channel, downstream in alluvial wedges, and in the reservoir at the outlet of the catchment, representative of mediumand long-term residence deposits, respectively. Our results show that most of the sediments transported and deposited downstream come from agricultural upland soils and fluvial lateral bank sources, where the physicochemical protection of OC is much lower than that of the forest soils, which are less sensitive to erosion. The protection of OC in forest soils and alluvial wedges (medium-term depositional areas) was mainly driven by physical protection (OC within aggregates), while chemical protection of OC (OC adhesion to soil mineral particles) was observed in the fluvial lateral banks. However, in the remaining sediment sources, in sediments during transport, and after deposition in the reservoir (long-term deposit), both mechanisms are equally relevant. Mineralization of the most labile OC (the intraaggregate particulate organic matter (Mpom) was predominant during transport. Aggregate formation and OC accumulation, mainly associated with macroaggregates and occluded microaggregates within macroaggregates, were predominant in the upper layer of depositional areas. However, OC was highly protected and stabilized at the deeper layers, mainly in the long-term deposits (reservoir), being even more protected than the OC from the most eroding sources (agricultural soils and fluvial lateral banks). Altogether our results show that both mediumand long-term depositional areas can play an important role in erosive areas within catchments, compensating for OC losses from the eroded sources and functioning as C sinks.
Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2009
María Almagro; Lopez J; José Ignacio Querejeta; M. Martínez-Mena
Soil & Tillage Research | 2008
M. Martínez-Mena; Lopez J; María Almagro; Carolina Boix-Fayos; J. Albaladejo
Journal of Soils and Sediments | 2013
J. Albaladejo; Roque Ortiz; N. Garcia-Franco; Antonio Ruiz Navarro; María Almagro; Javier Garcia Pintado; M. Martínez-Mena
Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2010
María Almagro; J. López; Carolina Boix-Fayos; J. Albaladejo; M. Martínez-Mena
Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change | 2013
María Almagro; J. de Vente; Carolina Boix-Fayos; N. Garcia-Franco; J. Melgares de Aguilar; David González; Albert Solé-Benet; M. Martínez-Mena
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2014
María Almagro; M. Martínez-Mena
European Journal of Agronomy | 2013
M. Martínez-Mena; N. Garcia-Franco; María Almagro; Antonio Ruiz-Navarro; J. Albaladejo; Javier Melgares de Aguilar; David González; José Ignacio Querejeta
Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2015
María Almagro; Fernando T. Maestre; Javier Martínez-López; Enrique Valencia; A. Rey