Abstract

We examined the roles of lithology, topography, vegetation and fire in generating local-scale (<1 km2) soil spatial variability in a seasonally dry tropical forest (SDTF) in southern India. For this, we mapped soil (available nutrients, Al, total C, pH, moisture and texture in the top 10cm), rock outcrops, topography, all native woody plants ≥1 cm diameter at breast height (DBH), and spatial variation in fire frequency (times burnt during the 17 years preceding soil sampling) in a permanent 50-ha plot. Unlike classic catenas, lower elevation soils had lesser moisture, plant-available Ca, Cu, Mn, Mg, Zn, B, clay and total C. The distribution of plant-available Ca, Cu, Mn and Mg appeared to largely be determined by the whole-rock chemical composition differences between amphibolites and hornblende-biotite gneisses. Amphibolites were associated with summit positions, while gneisses dominated lower elevations, an observation that concurs with other studies in the region which suggest that hillslope-scale topography has been shaped by differential weathering of lithologies. Neither NO3−-N nor NH4+-N was explained by the basal area of trees belonging to Fabaceae, a family associated with N-fixing species, and no long-term effects of fire on soil parameters were detected. Local-scale lithological variation is an important first-order control over soil variability at the hillslope scale in this SDTF, by both direct influence on nutrient stocks and indirect influence via control of local relief.

Highlights

  • Soil heterogeneity is thought to play a key role in the origin and maintenance of tropical plant diversity and community structure at regional [1,2], landscape [3,4] and local (

  • Rock outcrops largely consisted of hornblende-biotite gneisses and amphibolites, with a smaller number of charnockites distributed in the plot

  • Bedrock composition in the Mudumalai plot was not uniform, with one of the clearer patterns being significantly greater amphibolite presence at the top of plot topography and the widespread occurrence of hornblende-biotite gneisses at lower elevations (Fig 1a and 1b; S2 Appendix). This configuration concurs with the one found in the neighboring Mule Hole watershed [57], located ~17-km NW of the Mudumalai plot. Both sites are located in the Moyar-Bhavani shear zone and exhibit considerable lithological heterogeneity at the local (

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Summary

Introduction

Soil heterogeneity is thought to play a key role in the origin and maintenance of tropical plant diversity and community structure at regional [1,2], landscape [3,4] and local (

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