Abstract
This study aimed to quantify total organic carbon (TOC), carbon of humic substances (HS), and their stocks and evaluate the soil structural stability of areas with different uses under sandy loam soil texture. Soil samples were collected from managed areas and a reference area: Permanent Pasture (PP), No-Till (NT), Private Natural Heritage Reserve in the process of natural regeneration (PNHR) and Native Forest (FN). Dry mass analysis, carbon stock quantification, chemical fractionation of soil organic matter and soil aggregation were carried out. The NF area had the highest deposition of litter mass (ML). The PP and NT areas had the highest bulk density (Bd). TOC and Stock-C contents were higher in PNHR, followed by NF, and stratification index (STRATI) was also higher in the regeneration area. The NT, PNHR, and NF areas had a higher proportion of carbon fulvic acid fraction (C-FA) than carbon humic acid fraction (C-HA), but the fraction with the highest representation in all areas was carbon humin fraction (C-HUM). The PP, PNHR, and NF areas obtained the best aggregate stability indicators, as well as a higher proportion of macroaggregates, with the NT area having low aggregate stability. Recovery of C contents was observed in recent years in the area of PNHR, leading to a greater storage of C, which shows a quantitative recovery of C in the soil in this area after four years of natural regeneration. Furthermore, the PP and NT areas present a lower capacity for C sequestration, mainly due to the management conditions. Keywords: aggregate stability, climate change, crop production, soil quality.
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