Science Inventory

SUBTERRANEAN TERMITES: REGULATORS OF SOIL ORGANIC MATTER IN THE CHICHUAHUAN DESERT

Citation:

Nash, M. AND W. Whitford. SUBTERRANEAN TERMITES: REGULATORS OF SOIL ORGANIC MATTER IN THE CHICHUAHUAN DESERT. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/J-95/326.

Description:

Soil organic matter and the abundance of subterranean termites were measured at 89 locations spaced at 30-m intervals from the bottom of the top of a small desert watershed. here was no correlation between soil organic matter content and topographic position on the watershed. nalysis by autocorrelogram demonstrated that the soil organic matter content was randomly distributed on the watershed. here was a highly significant negative correlation between termite abundance and soil organic matter, r = - 0.97. oils characterized by horizon in soil pits within each vegetation type (soil type) showed some relationships to erosion-deposition areas on the watershed, with surface organic matter contents varying between 3.4% in the playa basin where termites were absent to 0.4% in a sparse shrubland on erosional soils. n the northern Chihuahuan Desert, subterranean termites appear to be responsible for most of the variation in soil organic matter.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:05/24/2002
Record Last Revised:04/16/2004
Record ID: 39183