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Dive into the research topics where Martinho António Santos Martins is active.

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Featured researches published by Martinho António Santos Martins.


Science of The Total Environment | 2014

Polyacrylamide application versus forest residue mulching for reducing post-fire runoff and soil erosion

Sergio A. Prats; Martinho António Santos Martins; Maruxa C. Malvar; Meni Ben-Hur; Jan Jacob Keizer

For several years now, forest fires have been known to increase overland flow and soil erosion. However, mitigation of these effects has been little studied, especially outside the USA. This study aimed to quantify the effectiveness of two so-called emergency treatments to reduce post-fire runoff and soil losses at the microplot scale in a eucalyptus plantation in north-central Portugal. The treatments involved the application of chopped eucalyptus bark mulch at a rate of 10-12 Mg ha(-1), and surface application of a dry, granular, anionic polyacrylamide (PAM) at a rate of 50 kg ha(-1). During the first year after a wildfire in 2010, 1419 mm of rainfall produced, on average, 785 mm of overland flow in the untreated plots and 8.4 Mg ha(-1) of soil losses. Mulching reduced these two figures significantly, by an average 52 and 93%, respectively. In contrast, the PAM-treated plots did not differ from the control plots, despite slightly lower runoff but higher soil erosion figures. When compared to the control plots, mean key factors for runoff and soil erosion were different in the case of the mulched but not the PAM plots. Notably, the plots on the lower half of the slope registered bigger runoff and erosion figures than those on the upper half of the slope. This could be explained by differences in fire intensity and, ultimately, in pre-fire standing biomass.


Journal of Hydrology and Hydromechanics | 2013

Runoff and inter-rill erosion in a Maritime Pine and a Eucalypt plantation following wildfire and terracing in north-central Portugal

Martinho António Santos Martins; A.I. Machado; Dalila Serpa; Sergio A. Prats; Silvia Regina Faria; María Eufemia Varela; O. González-Pelayo; Jan Jacob Keizer

Abstract The purpose of this study was to assess how terracing affected overland flow and associated sediment losses, at the micro-plot scale (0.25 m2), in recently burnt stands of the two principal forest types in north-central Portugal, i.e. mono-specific stands of Maritime Pine and Eucalypt. Terracing is an increasingly common practice of slope engineering in the study region but its impacts on runoff and erosion are poorly studied. Non-terraced plots at the Eucalypt and the Pine site revealed similar median runoff coefficients (rc: 20-30%) as well as comparable median sediment losses (15-25 g m-2) during the first seven months following wildfire. During the ensuing, slightly wetter 18-month period, however, non-terraced plots at the Pine site lost noticeably more sediments (in median, 90 vs. 18 g m-2), in spite the runoff response had remained basically the same (median rc: 33 vs. 28%). By contrast, terraced plots at the same Pine site lost hugely more sediments (in median, 1,200 g m-2) during this 18-month period. Terraced plots at the Eucalypt site even lost three times more sediments (in median, 3,600 g m-2). Ground cover and resistance to shear stress seemed to be key factors in the observed/inferred impacts of terracing.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Mid-term and scaling effects of forest residue mulching on post-fire runoff and soil erosion

Sergio A. Prats; Joseph W. Wagenbrenner; Martinho António Santos Martins; Maruxa C. Malvar; Jan Jacob Keizer

Mulching is an effective post-fire soil erosion mitigation treatment. Experiments with forest residue mulch have demonstrated that it increased ground cover to 70% and reduced runoff and soil loss at small spatial scales and for short post-fire periods. However, no studies have systematically assessed the joint effects of scale, time since burning, and mulching on runoff, soil loss, and organic matter loss. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of scale and forest residue mulch using 0.25m2 micro-plots and 100m2 slope-scale plots in a burnt eucalypt plantation in central Portugal. We assessed the underlying processes involved in the post-fire hydrologic and erosive responses, particularly the effects of soil moisture and soil water repellency. Runoff amount in the micro-plots was more than ten-fold the runoff in the larger slope-scale plots in the first year and decreased to eight-fold in the third post-fire year. Soil losses in the micro-plots were initially about twice the values in the slope-scale plots and this ratio increased over time. The mulch greatly reduced the cumulative soil loss measured in the untreated slope-scale plots (616gm-2) by 91% during the five post-fire years. The implications are that applying forest residue mulch immediately after a wildfire can reduce soil losses at spatial scales of interest to land managers throughout the expected post-fire window of disturbance, and that mulching resulted in a substantial relative gain in soil organic matter.


Journal of Environmental Engineering and Landscape Management | 2016

Biochars in soils: towards the required level of scientific understanding

Priit Tammeorg; Ana Catarina Bastos; Simon Jeffery; Frédéric Rees; Juergen Kern; Ellen R. Graber; Maurizio Ventura; M.G. Kibblewhite; António Amaro; Alice Budai; C.M.d.S. Cordovil; Xavier Domene; Ciro Gardi; G. Gascó; Ján Horák; Claudia Kammann; Elena Kondrlova; David A. Laird; Susana Loureiro; Martinho António Santos Martins; Pietro Panzacchi; Munoo Prasad; Marija Prodana; Aline Peregrina Puga; Greet Ruysschaert; Lidia Sas-Paszt; F. Silva; Wenceslau Geraldes Teixeira; Giustino Tonon; Gemini Delle Vedove

Key priorities in biochar research for future guidance of sustainable policy development have been identified by expert assessment within the COST Action TD1107. The current level of scientific understanding (LOSU) regarding the consequences of biochar application to soil were explored. Five broad thematic areas of biochar research were addressed: soil biodiversity and ecotoxicology, soil organic matter and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, soil physical properties, nutrient cycles and crop production, and soil remediation. The highest future research priorities regarding biochar’s effects in soils were: functional redundancy within soil microbial communities, bioavailability of biochar’s contaminants to soil biota, soil organic matter stability, GHG emissions, soil formation, soil hydrology, nutrient cycling due to microbial priming as well as altered rhizosphere ecology, and soil pH buffering capacity. Methodological and other constraints to achieve the required LOSU are discussed and options for efficient progress of biochar research and sustainable application to soil are presented.


Genomics | 2018

Effects of polymethylmethacrylate nanoplastics on Dicentrarchus labrax

I. Brandts; Mariana Teles; Asta Tvarijonaviciute; M.L. Pereira; Martinho António Santos Martins; Lluis Tort; M. Oliveira

The present study aimed to evaluate the effects of ~45 nm nanoplastics (NPs) on the marine fish Dicentrarchus labrax after a short-term exposure. Animals were exposed to a concentration range of NPs for 96 h and liver, plasma and skin mucus were sampled. Assessed endpoints included biochemical biomarkers and expression of genes related to lipid metabolism, immune system and general cell stress. Abundance of mRNA transcripts related to lipid metabolism, pparα and pparγ, were significantly increased after exposure to NPs. Biochemical endpoints revealed decreased esterase activity levels in plasma, suggesting that the immune system of fish might be compromised by exposure to NPs. Moreover, significantly lower levels of alkaline phosphatase were found in the skin mucus of animals exposed to NPs. The present results suggest that NPs may represent a hazard to this marine fish, potentially interfering with the metabolism of lipids and the correct function of the immune response.


Catena | 2013

Assessing the role of pre-fire ground preparation operations and soil water repellency in post-fire runoff and inter-rill erosion by repeated rainfall simulation experiments in Portuguese eucalypt plantations

Maruxa C. Malvar; Martinho António Santos Martins; João Pedro Nunes; Peter R. Robichaud; Jan Jacob Keizer


Land Degradation & Development | 2016

HYDROLOGIC IMPLICATIONS OF POST‐FIRE MULCHING ACROSS DIFFERENT SPATIAL SCALES

Sergio A. Prats; Joseph W. Wagenbrenner; Martinho António Santos Martins; Maruxa C. Malvar; Jan Jacob Keizer


Journal of Soils and Sediments | 2016

Biochar effects on soil water infiltration and erosion under seal formation conditions: rainfall simulation experiment

Vikas Abrol; Meni Ben-Hur; Frank G. A. Verheijen; Jacob J. Keizer; Martinho António Santos Martins; Haim Tenaw; Ludmilla Tchehansky; Ellen R. Graber


Cuadernos de investigación geográfica / Geographical Research Letters | 2015

Within-in flume sediment deposition in a forested catchment following wildfire and post-fire bench terracing, north-central Portugal

Jan Jacob Keizer; Martinho António Santos Martins; Sergio A. Prats; Silvia Regina Faria; O. González-Pelayo; A.I. Machado; María Ermitas Rial-Rivas; L.F. Santos; Dalila Serpa; María Eufemia Varela


Cuadernos de investigación geográfica / Geographical Research Letters | 2014

Post-fire soil erosion mitigation: a review of the last research and techniques developed in Portugal

Sergio A. Prats; Maruxa C. Malvar; Martinho António Santos Martins; Jacob J. Keizer

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F. Silva

University of Aveiro

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