Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T09:41:34.191Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Changes in soil chemical properties and their spatial distribution after logging and conversion to oil palm plantation in Sabah (Borneo)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 October 2023

Trevan Flynn*
Affiliation:
Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Soil Biology and Biogeochemistry, Na Sádkach 7, 370 05, České Budějovice, Czech Republic Swedish University of Agriculture Sciencies, Uppsala, SE-750 07, Sweden
Jiri Tuma
Affiliation:
Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Soil Biology and Biogeochemistry, Na Sádkach 7, 370 05, České Budějovice, Czech Republic
Tom M Fayle
Affiliation:
Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Entomology, Branišovská 1160/31, 370 05, České Budějovice, Czech Republic School of Biological and Behavioural Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK
Hana Veselá
Affiliation:
Institute for Environmental studies, Charles University, Benátská 2, 12800 Prague, Czech Republic
Jan Frouz
Affiliation:
Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Soil Biology and Biogeochemistry, Na Sádkach 7, 370 05, České Budějovice, Czech Republic Institute for Environmental studies, Charles University, Benátská 2, 12800 Prague, Czech Republic
*
Corresponding author: Trevan Flynn; Email: trevan.flynn@slu.se
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Conversion of primary forest into oil palm plantations is common in tropical countries, affecting soil properties, ecosystem services and land-use management. However, little is known about the short-range spatial soil distribution that is important for soil scientists, ecologists, entomologists, mycologists or microbiologists. In this study, seven soil properties (pH, EC (µS/m), P (mg/kg), NO3- (mg/kg), N%, C% and C:N) were measured to quantify the spatial autocorrelation across primary forest, selectively logged forest and oil palm plantation in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. Local variograms were calculated (range ∼5 m) to determine the short-range variation, and a decision tree as well as principal component analysis were implemented to determine if the overall (global) mean differed between land uses. As hypothesised, oil palm soils deviated the most from primary forest soils, which had more fluctuating variograms and in general, a shorter range. Oil palm plantations also showed a difference in the global mean except for electrical conductivity. Selectively logged forests also differed in their short-range spatial structure; however, the global mean and variance remained similar to primary forest soil with the exception of labile phosphorus and nitrate. These results were attributed to initial plantation development, removal of topsoil, fertiliser application and topography.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Anthropogenic land-use change often affects soil properties over a shorter time span than natural factors such as climate, topography, vegetation, age and parent material (Amundson and Jenny Reference Amundson and Jenny1991; Winkler et al. Reference Winkler, Fuchs, Rounsevell and Herold2021; Yaalon and Yaron Reference Yaalon and Yaron1966). In the tropics, logging of primary forests and conversion into agricultural land is widespread (Benhin Reference Benhin2006; Kleinschmit et al. Reference Kleinschmit, Ferraz Ziegert and Walther2021; World Resource Institute 1991), which reduces the quality and quantity of natural resources (Guerrero et al. Reference Guerrero, Gomes and Lollo2020). This topic has been widely studied; however, little is known about the short-range variation of soil chemical properties and hence, biodiversity, ecology, entomology, microbiology, mycology and many other ecosystem services.

It is known that the conversion to oil palm plantation reduces numerous ecosystem services provided by soil. For example, after logging, areas that are leveled (along with roads) increase run-off causing erosion (Van Wambeke Reference Van Wambeke1992; Hartanto et al. 2003), and with the removal of topsoil and drainage, the soil organic matter (SOM) content is reduced (Krejčová et al. Reference Krejčová, Vicentini, Flynn, Mudrák and Frouz2021; Andriesse and Schelhaas Reference Andriesse and Schelhaas1987). This causes loss of fertility (Dressen et al. Reference Dressen, Buurman and Permadhy1976) and an increase in soil compaction (Lal Reference Lal2021; Lyczak et al. Reference Lyczak, Kabrick and Knapp2021). These losses further cause a reduction in biodiversity (World Resource Institute 1991), can affect soil processes such as bioturbation (Tuma et al. Reference Tuma, Fleiss, Eggleton, Frouz, Klimes, Lewis, Yusah and Fayle2019), increase evapotranspiration (Uhl et al. Reference Uhl, Clark, Clark and Murphy1981) and cause pollution (Henderson and Osbourne Reference Henderson and Osbourne2000; Koh and Wilcove Reference Koh and Wilcove2007). This reduces the provisioning of ecosystem services such as water purification, food production, livelihood, climate regulation and biodiversity (FAO and UNEP 2020).

The soil properties that provide these functions and services are correlated in geographic space. This spatial autocorrelation reflects processes that help form soils and informs proper land-use management. The most common geostatistical technique to model the spatial structure of soil properties is known as a variogram. A variogram generalises a random process over the distance between point pairs (Matheron Reference Matheron1963). A variogram shows the short-range variance or measurement errors (nugget), the total semivariance (sill) and the distance over which the property is no longer correlated in geographic space and/or time (range).

Oil palm plantations need the least area per litre of any vegetable oil (Basiron Reference Basiron2007; Poore and Nemecek 2018), provide a low financial cost to the consumer and high profitability for the producer, and are a driver of economic development (Qaim et al. Reference Qaim, Sibhatu, Siregar and Grass2020). Consequently, oil palm expansion is driving deforestation in Southeast Asia (Henderson and Osborne Reference Henderson and Osbourne2000; Koh and Wilcove Reference Koh and Wilcove2007; Palm Reference Palm2005). For example, in Malaysian Borneo, from 1990 to 2018, oil palm was responsible for decreasing the area of primary forest by 13% in Sarawk and 16% in Sabah and decreasing the area of peat forests from by 21% in Sarawak and 19% in Sabah (Jaafar et al. Reference Jaafar, Said, Maulud, Uning, Latif, Kamarulzaman, Mohan, Pradhan, Saad, Broadbent, Cardil, Silva and Takriff2020).

In the state of Sabah, Malaysian Borneo, oil palm plantations are generally established from areas that were originally selectively logged forests (Osman et al. Reference Osman, Phua, Ling and Kamlun2012), where trees with the highest economic value were harvested first and then fast-growing trees in the following round of harvest. Once logged, the areas were left to naturally regenerate, often for multiple decades. However, even with regulations, logged forest mainly consists of pioneering trees and the forests were left degraded (Reynolds et al. Reference Reynolds, Payne, Sinun, Mosigil and Walsh2011). These areas were converted to oil palm by mechanically levelling, draining and/or removing the topsoil as well as adding infrastructure, fertiliser, herbicides and pesticides.

The aim of this study was to determine if land use alters soil chemical properties. It is hypothesised that the largest change will be seen in the short-range spatial autocorrelation in oil palm and logged forest relative to primary forest soils. Additionally, it is believed that the global mean will be significantly different for oil palm but similar for logged forest and primary forest soils.

Materials and methods

Study sites

The research site (Figure 1a, b) forms part of the Stability of Altered Forest Ecosystems (SAFE) project in the state of Sabah, Borneo Malaysia (Ewers et al. Reference Ewers, Didham, Fahrig, Hector, Holt, Kapos, Reynolds, Sinun, Snaddon and Turner2011; Tuma et al. Reference Tuma, Fleiss, Eggleton, Frouz, Klimes, Lewis, Yusah and Fayle2019) approximately 4 $^\circ $ 40’ 27” N and 117 $^\circ $ 31’ 40” E with an elevation ranging from 370 to 500 m. The climate is characterised by an isohyperthermic soil temperature and an udic soil moisture regime with a mean annual temperature of 26.7 and mean annual precipitation of ∼2,650 mm (Kumagai and Porporato Reference Kumagai and Porporato2012; Kuntashula et al. Reference Kuntashula, Chabala and Mulenga2014; Walsh and Newbery Reference Walsh and Newbery1999). The dominant soil types in the region are Typic/Humic Hapludults and Kandiudults on hilly positions with various types of Histosols, Inceptisols and Entisols in lower regions (Sakurai Reference Sakurai1999). The geology is characterised by a metamorphic complex of amphibolites, and gneiss intruded by granite, gabbro, and ultramafic rock (Haile and Lee Reference Haile and Lee1997).

Figure 1. Site within the surrounding area (a), sampling clusters (b) and sampling orientation in each cluster extending from the GPS placed at the black dot (c). Numbers represent how the coordinates were manually entered for each observation. PF: Primary Forest; LF: Logged Forest; OP: Oil Palm.

Three land uses were sampled before any SAFE project-related experimental fragmentation. The primary forest has been under conservation since 1976 and has experienced little to no human disturbances. This area lies on both eastern and western hill slopes and has a mean elevation of 431 m, and Shorea and Diospyros tree genera predominate. The logged forest areas were on western sloping positions, has a mean elevation of 450 m, had been selectively logged at least twice (between 1970–1990 and 1999–2010) and was previously logged for Dryobalanops, Dipterocarpus, Shorea and Parashorea tree genera. Only past signs of logging have been observed and secondary forest now predominates. Oil palm plantations were found almost continuously in slightly lower elevation areas (mean elevation of 385 m) such as foot slopes and valleys, planted in 2006 and are fertilised twice a year with diammonium phosphate ((NH4)2HPO4)), potassium chloride (KCl), ammonium sulphate ((NH4)2,SO4), magnesium sulphate (MgSO4) and disodium tetraborate octahydrate (Na2[B4O5(OH)4]·8H2O) (Elias et al. Reference Elias, Robinson, Both, Goodall, Majalap-lee, Ostle and Mcnamara2020). However, the amount of fertiliser applied was not known. The oil palm site is managed by the company Benta Wawasan Sdn. Bhd. (Ewers et al. Reference Ewers, Didham, Fahrig, Hector, Holt, Kapos, Reynolds, Sinun, Snaddon and Turner2011) and consist of Elaeis guineensis monocultures with a low, open canopy and sparse under vegetation.

Twenty-two sampling clusters (Figure 1b) were dug on the three land-use areas (8 in primary forest, 6 in logged forest and 8 in oil palm). Each sampling cluster comprised 10 samples (n = 220), 1 m apart, taken in the shape of a right triangle as shown in Figure 1c. Since the sample locations within each cluster were inside the precision of the GPS (5 m), the coordinates were manually entered.

Composite soil samples (average of total depth) down to 20 cm in depth were taken, were homogenised by hand (in the field by mixing the soil by hand), then sieved (2 mm), and oven-dried at 70–80℃ for 3–5 days. Seven soil chemical properties were measured: pH, EC (µS/m), P (mg/kg), NO3 - (mg/kg), N%, C% and C:N. The pH and EC were measured in a 1:2.5 soil to water solution after mechanically shaking for an hour and filtered. A 1:100 soil to Mechlich-3 solution was shaken for 30 min and filtered to measure labile P with a UV Genesys 10 Thermo spectrometer at an 889 nm wavelength as described by Watanabe and Olsen (Reference Watanabe and Olsen1965). To determine NO3 -, samples were extracted in deionised water (1:5 soil:water ratio) and filtered, and the NO3 - was determined using a colorimetric method (Zbíral et al. Reference Zbíral, Honsa and Malý1997). The same filtrate was used to determine pH and conductivity using a glass and potentiometric electrode. Total organic C and N percent were measured through a Flash 2000 Thermo Scientific elemental analyser.

Data analysis

A flow chart of the process used to determine the variability of the soil properties on the site is shown in Figure 2. From the observations, variograms were created for each soil property and the model fit was estimated through ordinary kriging. The difference in mean soil properties between land uses was then calculated through a conditional inference tree (ctree). Then, principal component analysis (PCA) was conducted to determine the variance. To determine the correlations between soil properties, a correlation matrix was constructed for all soil properties within a land use. All statistical analysis was conducted in R software (R Core Team 2017).

Figure 2. Flow chart of the process used to capture the variation of measured soil properties.

Spatial autocorrelation

Before developing the variograms, data for each soil property were checked for normality and heterogeneity through a Shapiro–Wilk test (Shapiro and Wilk Reference Shapiro and Wilk1965) and Levene’s test (Levenes Reference Levenes1960), respectively. Variograms were then constructed to determine the spatial structure of individual soil properties within each land use. Variograms are derived from the semivariance between point pairs with distance. Mathematically, this is described as follows (Matheron Reference Matheron1963):

$$\gamma \left( h \right) = {1 \over {2\left| {N\left( h \right)} \right|}}\sum\limits_{N\left( h \right)} {{{({z_i} - {z_j})}^2}}, $$

where $\gamma \left( h \right)$ is the semivariance at distance $h$ , $N\left( h \right)$ is the set of all point pairs with distance, and ${z_i}$ and ${z_j}$ are values of the soil property at distance i and j, Therefore, $h$ is the product of i and j. This is known as an empirical variogram from which theoretical variograms are computed from.

Theoretical variograms were then fit using residual maximum likelihood (REML; Bartlett Reference Bartlett1937) to automatically fit the nugget ( $h = 0$ ), the sill ( $h = \;\mathop {\lim }\limits_{h\; \to \infty } \gamma \left( h \right))$ and the range. This method was used because it is an unbiased estimate of variance, it does not need homogenous variance, its residuals can be correlated and it is computationally efficient (Johnston Reference Johnston1972). Four theoretical variogram models were tried for each property including spherical (Sph), exponential (Exp), gaussian (Gau) and wave (Wav) models. A more detailed explanation of these variogram models can be found in the supplementary material A1. The final models were selected through ordinary kriging (Matheron Reference Matheron1963) with leave-one-out cross-validation. The model with the lowest root mean squared error (RMSE) for each land use was selected as the final model.

To compare soil properties on different land uses, the spatial autocorrelation of each variogram was evaluated on their spatial dependence, which involved the ratio of the nugget, sill and range (NSR). In this paper, the NSR is as follows:

$${\rm{NSR}} = {{{\rm{Nugget}}} \over {\left( {{\rm{Sill}} + {\rm{Range}}} \right)}},$$

The nugget, sill and range were scaled from 0.1 to 0.9, so each variable had equal weight (e.g., no large range or sill). The smaller the NSR is, the greater the spatial autocorrelation. This spatial dependency measure was used because it incorporates the three common aspects of a variogram into one simple equation (x and y axis), where the commonly used nugget:sill ratio to compare variograms leaves out the range.

Mean soil properties

The means of the soil properties were evaluated between each land use through a type of decision tree known as a ctree (Hothorn et al. Reference Hothorn, Hornik and Zeileis2006; Zeileis and Hothorn Reference Zeileis and Hothorn2015). A ctree recursively splits the data on the independent variable to make the dependent variable more homogenous. It does so until no more splits are possible in the ctree, or a user-defined significance value (p-value) has been reached (Hastie et al. Reference Hastie, Tibshirani and Friedman2009). The ctree was developed with a Bonferroni test at each split with a p-value of 0.01 as the stopping criteria. A ctree was used because they are easy to interpret, do not need linear data, perform well with small sample sizes and are non-parametric (Hothorn et al. Reference Hothorn, Hornik and Zeileis2006; Zeileis and Hothorn Reference Zeileis and Hothorn2015).

After the ctree was grown, the residuals for each model were checked for normality, heterogeneity and spatial autocorrelation. If there was spatial autocorrelation, the residuals were kriged and added back to the model, and the distributions were checked again. It should be noted that the models were only used to see the statistically significant differences and not to predict the soil properties.

Soil property correlations

Before PCA analysis (Pearson Reference Pearson1901), the soil properties were normalised $\left( {\mathop \to \limits_{0,1} } \right)$ so that all properties had an equal weight in the covariance matrix. The soil properties were evaluated on how much each contributed to the variability and how well the soils represent the principal components (PCs), also known as Cos2. The contribution is the percentage a soil property contributes to the total variance in a PC and ranges from 0 to 100%. The further away the soil property is from the origin (coordinates = 0,0), the more that property contributes to the variance explained. A larger Cos2 implies a better representation within a PC and, hence, the more important the property is. Cos2 is simply the sum of the squared coordinates of a soil property on a biplot.

A correlation matrix was created to determine how the soil properties correlate with each other within a land use. Correlations were determined using the REML model as described in Sec 2.2.1. p-Values and Pearson’s correlation coefficient (R2) were used to interpret the correlations.

Results

Spatial autocorrelation

The variograms for each land use (Figure 3) and (Table 1) clearly show a large difference in the semivariance for each land use. In primary forest soils, pH (nugget = 0.00, sill = 0.02, range = 0.03 m, NSR = 0.50), EC (nugget = 148, sill = 480, range = 5.85 m, NSR = 0.24), N (nugget = 0.00, sill = 0.008, range = 1.11 m, NSR = 0.29) and C (nugget = 0.50, sill = 0.80, range = 1.50 m, NSR = 0.12) all had Exp theoretical variograms with RMSE of 0.15, 15.2 µS/mg, 0.08% and 1.01%, respectively. On the other hand, labile P (nugget = 2.00, sill = 5.50, range = 3.00 m, NSR = 0.17), NO3 - (nugget = 2.00, sill = 5.50, range = 3.00, NSR = 0.17) and C:N (nugget = 0.00, sill = 1.56, range= 1.11, NSR = 0.29) had a Sph theoretical variogram as their best-fitting model with a RMSE of 2.10 mg/kg, 8.37 mg/kg and 1.31, respectively.

Figure 3. Variograms with the trends for primary forest (PF), logged forest (LF) and oil palm (OP) being green, blue and yellow, respectively. The points represent the semivariance between observation pairs, while the curve is the model of the observation pairs.

Table 1. Theoretical variogram models used, goodness of fit (RMSE) and parameters (nugget, sill, range and normalised spatial dependency (NSR) for primary forest, logged forest and oil palm for each soil property.

For models, “Exp” = exponential, “Sph” = spherical, “Gau” = Gaussian and “Wav” = wave models.

Selectively logged forest changed to more complex theoretical variogram models with only labile P (nugget = 2.00, sill = 5.00, range = 1.50 m and NSR = 0.25) having an Exp variogram with a RMSE of 21.1 mg/kg, while only NO3 - (nugget = 37.9, sill = 79.0, range = 2.80 m and NSR = 1.26) and N (nugget = 4.00×10-3, sill = 9.00×10-3, range = 3.80 m, NSR = 14) had Sph theoretical variograms with a RMSE of 8.50 mg/kg for NO3 - and 0.09% for N. Properties with Wav theoretical variograms included pH (nugget = 0.04, sill = 0.10, range = 1.70 m and NSR =0.24) and EC (nugget = 198, sill = 245, range = 1.60 and NSR = 0.63) with RMSE of 0.33 and 16.0 µS/mg, respectively. Carbon (nugget = 1.00, sill = 3.00, range = 2.80 m and NSR = 0.17) and C:N (nugget = 1.00, sill = 3.90, range = 3.20 m and NSR = 0.16) had a Gau theoretical variogram with a RMSE of 1.34% for C and 1.25 for C:N.

In oil palm, the Wav theoretical variogram was dominant with the best-fitting models for labile P (nugget = 200, sill = 400, range = 1.50 m and NSR = 0.49), NO3 - (nugget = 19.4, sill = 27.8, range = 0.88 m and NSR = 0.39), N (nugget = 3.00×10-4, sill = 9.00×10-4, range = 1.12 m and NSRE = 0.29) and C (nugget = 0.05, sill = 0.13, range = 1.55 m and NSR = 0.25) with RMSE of 21.9 mg/kg, 5.38 mg/kg, 0.03% and 0.34%, respectively. The Gau model was utilised for pH (nugget = 0.05, sill = 0.06, range = 1.70 m and NSR = 0.23) and C:N (nugget = 1.00, sill = 3.00, range = 4.00 m and NSR = 0.23), which had a Gau theoretical variogram and a RMSE of 0.32 for pH and 1.20 for C:N. Electrical conductivity (nugget = 200, sill = 400, range = 1.00 m and NSR = 0.52) was the only property to have an Exp model and had a RMSE of 20.3 µS/mg.

Mean soil properties

Except for NO3 - and labile P, there was no statistically significant difference between the mean in primary forest and logged forest soil properties (Figure 4) according to the ctrees’ terminal nodes. On the other hand, oil palm soils were statistically different from both primary forest and logged forest for all soil properties except EC. Oil palm plantations had a lower pH (5.25) relative to primary forest (6.00) and logged forest (5.98). Electrical conductivity was the lowest in oil palm (57.5 µS/cm), then logged forest (67.4 µS/cm) and highest in primary forest soils (70.5 µS/cm). Labile P was the lowest in primary forest (5.70 mg/kg), then logged forest (6.61 mg/kg) and highest in oil palm soils (29.1 mg/kg), which was also seen in the PCA. Oil palm plantation soils had low NO3 - (10.4 mg/kg), primary forest soils had relatively high (21.4 mg/kg) and logged forest soils had the highest NO3 - (26.6 mg/kg). Nitrogen was highest in logged forest (0.28%) and primary forest (0.26%) with the lowest in oil palm (0.13%). Carbon follows a similar trend, with logged forest soils having the greatest (3.41%), followed by primary forest (3.12%) and then oil palm with the lowest (1.25%). The C:N ratio indicates that primary forest has the highest (12.3), followed by logged forest (12.0) and then oil palm (9.27) soils.

Figure 4. Boxplot of the significant differences (p<0.01*) of soil properties and land-use types according to the conditional inference trees’ terminal nodes. The horizontal line represents the median, the hinges represent the 25th and 75th quantiles, the vertical lines represent the distance between the 1st and 3rd quartiles, and the points are outliers. PF: Primary Forest; LF: Logged Forest; OP: Oil Palm.

Soil property correlations

The first two PCs accounted for 64% of the variability in the dataset (Figure 5). Nitrogen and C percent contributed the most to PC1 (darker lines) with 23% and 26% contribution, respectively. These two elements are also best represented in PC1 with a Cos2 of 0.75 and 0.84 for N and C, respectively. Nitrate and EC represent the next largest contributors to PC1 with contributions of 16% and 14% with a Cos2 of 0.50 and 0.44, respectively. All four of these elements were negatively correlated with PC1 and PC2. In other words, as the two PCs decrease, EC, NO3 -, N and C values increase.

Figure 5. The first two principal components of all soil properties with their contributions to the components (colour of arrows in percent). Ellipsis show the clusters for primary forest (PF), logged forest (LF) and oil palm (OP). The larger the ellipsoid, the more variation in soil properties determined by the observations (points) for the principal components.

Labile P represented more than half the contribution to PC2 (58%) with a Cos2 of 0.74. The pH also contributed to PC2 (26%) but had a much lower Cos2 (0.32). Unlike the other soil properties, a high P content was correlated with oil palm and had little correlation to primary forest or logged forest. On the other hand, higher values for all other soil properties were more strongly correlated with primary forest and logged forest. This can be seen in the strong directionality for both C and N towards these two land uses.

The R2 values (Figure 6) for primary forest soils show that EC was highly correlated with P (0.66), N (0.82) and C (0.82). Labile P correlated with N (0.74) and C (0.74), while N correlated highly with C (0.93). In logged forest soils, EC correlated with N (0.86), C (0.84) and C:N (0.74), while N correlated with C (0.97) and C:N (0.75). Surprisingly, pH negatively correlated with N (-0.69) and C (-0.49) in OP soils and again, N was highly correlated with C (0.91).

Figure 6. Correlation matrix of soil properties within primary forest (PF), logged forest (LF) and oil palm (OP). Blank spaces indicate p-values > 0.01, and therefore, the correlations are not displayed.

Discussion

Logging altered the short-range spatial structure of the soil properties, yet the mean values of most of the soil properties remained similar between primary forest and logged forest soils. This is most notable for pH, where it was observed that the theoretical variogram changed from an Exp model with a high NSR in primary forest soils to a Wav model with a small NSR in logged forest soils. Therefore, the spatial structure changed to a higher degree of spatial dependency that has positive and negative correlations with an increase in range (Mahdi et al. Reference Mahdi, Abuzaid and Atta2020). This agrees with observations made by Lima et al. (Reference Lima, Beuchle, Griess, Verhegghen and Vogt2020), that logging substantially alters spatial patterns of many ecosystem parameters, for example, logging could have made the forest less homogenous and/or opened the canopy (Berry et al. Reference Berry, Phillips, Ong and Hamer2008). There should be noted that spatial aspects of logged forest is more variable than primary forest; however, the larger differences between logged forest and primary forest in smaller scale variation appear even in situations where aspects is similar. Despite some effects by slope variations and these cannot be excluded, it is believed that selective logging was a major reason for the observed difference between primary forest and logged forest.

Interestingly, EC and NO3 - in primary forest had effective ranges greater than the distance than the soil samples and, therefore, increased without bounds at this scale. This may indicate there is trend in the data such as a slope gradient and sample design, or the scale was too fine (Webster and Oliver Reference Webster and Oliver2001). However, this was not found for properties in any other land use, and because of the short distances, it is thought this was due to the fine scale. However, there are many factors that can affect EC such as mineralogy, salts, structure, water content, bulk density and more (Adviento-Borbe et al. Reference Adviento-Borbe, Doran, Drijber and Dobermann2006). Therefore, further studies into soil physical properties could improve the interpretation of EC and NO3 - on the different land uses.

Labile P had a much greater sill in oil palm than primary forest and logged forest soils. This is not surprising for two reasons: i) P generally binds to sorption sites on minerals and, therefore, gets preferentially eroded causing variability, and ii) the plantation applies P fertiliser, which may have not been precisely applied causing the Wav spatial structure and increasing the variance at this scale.

It was speculated that the low spatial autocorrelation could be due to an unpronounced catena effect so that the logged forest soil properties do not influence each other as much as in primary forest soils (smaller nugget to sill ratio with shorter range). This can make the soil distribution appear random, which has implications for soil mapping in the area. For example, randomness would make field surveys more expensive, or the maps could be less accurate (Beckett and Burrough Reference Beckett and Burrough1971). This has downstream effects particularly for land-use management, restoration efforts and monitoring environmental resources. However, it is difficult to know if this is a result of other environmental factors such as topography, climate, and parent material. For example, Flynn et al. (Reference Flynn, Rozanov, Ellis, Clercq and Clarke2020) found that both physical and chemical factors are strongly affected by landform elements.

Oil palm also shows a difference in the spatial structure of the variograms compared to primary forest. Like logged forest soil, oil palm seem to have changed into a more periodic structure (semivariance fluctuates around the sill over distance), especially for components commonly associated with SOM such as P, N, C and C:N. It is thought that the stripping of SOM during plantation development was the cause of this trend. When stripped, some places are easier to strip than others and may not always be near to each other and, hence, the periodic structure. Therefore, in this area, logged forest and oil palm change the spatial distribution of these seven soil chemical properties, which is important for economic efficiency and sustainability.

Unlike the variogram analysis, primary forest and logged forest soils are similar according to the global mean and variance. Therefore, it is believed that logged forest soils experienced little degradation and/or have partially regenerated. Both land uses show a similar distribution in orthogonally transformed space, indicating that the same soil properties are controlling the global variance. Not surprisingly, N and C account for the most variation in primary forest and logged forest as these land uses were not stripped of SOM. Originally, expected by general patterns of C and N, primary forest would have the highest amount of both C and N; however, trees in the Dipterocarpaceae family associate with ectomycorrhiza (Smits Reference Smits1994), which help to form microaggregates and root exudes that protect N and C physically and chemically (Center for International Forestry Research 1998). Therefore, N and C were the same in primary forest and logged forest soils even with the more open canopy due to soil stability.

It was unexpected that NO3 - and P were statistically higher in logged forest than primary forest as it was thought that the more open canopy of logged forest would cause more surface erosion or leaching of salts. This could also indicate that conditions for mineralisation are greater in logged forest soils possibly due to better drainage (Stottlemyer et al. Reference Stottlemyer, Rhoades and Steltzer2001) and higher temperatures (Miller and Geisseler Reference Miller and Geisseler2018), and the litter fall from the pioneering trees could be easier for microbes to break down (Quan et al. Reference Quan, Wang, He, Zhang, Wen, Su, Wang and Xue2014). Since logged forest soils have a southeastern slope and a more open canopy, these attributes may have better drainage and higher temperatures and, hence, caused greater mineralisation. Unfortunately, this has an environmental impact as it can cause eutrophication both on- and off-site (Carpenter et al. Reference Carpenter, Caraco, Correll, Howarth, Sharpley and Smith1998).

On the other hand, oil palm soils were not similar in the transformed space and besides P, soil properties had a lower global mean and variance in the oil palm cluster. Nevertheless, in the tropics with high temperatures and precipitation, low pH values were expected. The lower pH in oil palm soils is most likely due to nitrification of NH4 +-based fertiliser application and the subsequent hydrolysis of Al3+ both of which release H+ (Ragland and Coleman Reference Ragland and Coleman1960; Sigurdarson et al. Reference Sigurdarson, Svane and Karring2018). These changes in soil properties have impacts on ecosystem services dramatically such as long-term degradation causing a reduction in growth and yield. For example, it affects nutrient cycles and availability and nutrient toxicity (flora and fauna), decreases water quality, decreases soil fertility, facilitates leaching (ion exchange) and influences SOM accumulation (Lükewille and Alewell Reference Lükewille and Alewell2008).

The results of EC in oil palm were unexpected because it was thought that the application of fertiliser and the position in the landscape (low lying) would cause salt and clay accumulation. However, a pH below 5.50 facilitates the exchange of Al+3 and H+ for basic cations on the solid phase and, hence, leaching of salts (Haynes & Swift Reference Haynes and Swift1986). This reaction would be pushed further with the addition of fertiliser (acidification) and leaching (cations removed). Additionally, this could represent a low water-holding capacity due to the removal of the C-rich topsoil (Brevik et al. Reference Brevik, Fenton and Lazari2006). Nevertheless, the global mean EC was similar in all land types, further indicating that there are more processes controlling EC than simply land use. These could include many soil physio-chemical, environmental and anthropogenic factors such as geology, water quality, atmospheric deposition, land management, landscape position amongst others (Corwin and Lesch Reference Corwin and Lesch2005) and bioturbation/biogenic processes (Tuma et al. Reference Tuma, Fleiss, Eggleton, Frouz, Klimes, Lewis, Yusah and Fayle2019).

Not surprisingly, P in oil palm was much greater than in primary forest and logged forest. For oil palm soils, it is speculated that the application of diammonium phosphate increased the P content along planting rows. The high P content in oil palm soils can have a large ecological impact as P often ends up in aquatic systems (Smith et al. Reference Smith, Tilman and Nekola1999) creating hypoxic conditions in lakes and coastal zones, decreases water quality (Khan and Mohammad Reference Khan, Mohammad, Ansari and Gill2014) and decreases biodiversity (Rabalais Reference Rabalais2002). This is of concern as some measurements of P were excessively high, increasing the risk of land degradation.

It was thought that fertiliser in oil palm soils would increase the NO3 - concentration due to the nitrification of NH4 + fertiliser; however, this was not the case. The most likely explanations for the low NO3 - are increased leaching from the profile due to the udic soil moisture regime (Spalding et al. Reference Spalding, Watts, Schepers, Burbach, Exner, Poreda and Martin2001), an increase in erosion from heavy rain with less protection from the canopy or the lower pH has been slowing the nitrification of NH4 + to NO3 - (Amatya et al. Reference Amatya, Kansakar, Tare and Fiksdal2011) caused by an alteration of microbe populations (Lee-Cruz et al. Reference Lee-Cruz, Edwards, Tripathi and Adams2013; Tripathi et al. Reference Tripathi, Edwards, Mendes, Kim, Dong, Kim and Adams2016). Conversely, in primary forest and logged forest soils, NO3 - was more abundant most likely due to vegetation cover and possibly, and nitrification was not inhibited on these land uses.

Like the spatial distribution of oil palm soils, the loss of N and C most likely originated from the initial plantation development due to oxidation of SOM, anthropogenic pedoturbation and the physical removal of topsoil (Corley and Tinker Reference Corley and Tinker2015). Additionally, oil palm do not naturally form symbiotic relationships with mycorrhiza and need to be inoculated with arbuscular mycorrhiza (Sundram Reference Sundram2010). Therefore, N and C do not have the protection that is provided by the fungi in primary forest and logged forest soils. However, C losses were not observed by Khasanah et al. (Reference Khasanah, van Meine, Ningsih and Rahayu2015) over long-term monitoring of C in oil palm soils (> 25 years). This is because initially, C declines and then increases from oil palm residues, forming a U-shaped curve. Since the oil palm in this study site is still considered early in the life cycle, C and N may be on the downward trend of the U curve described by the authors. Additionally, the lower C:N of oil palm soils would indicate faster mineralisation rates and the release of NH4 + with subsequent uptake from organisms or leaching and loss of C through the release of CO2 (Hossain et al. Reference Hossain, Rahman, Biswas, Miah, Akhter, Maniruzzaman, Choudhury, Ahmed, Shiragi and Kalra2017).

An additional pattern that emerged was the correlation between properties in each land use, which helped to further explain these results. The difference in property interactions indicates a difference in soil functionality. For example, the negative correlation of N and C with pH in oil palm soils (positive in primary forest and logged forest) could represent a loss of the pH buffering capacity due to low SOM from removal and heavy fertilisation. The loss of the pH buffering capacity due to N fertiliser is poorly understood; however, Zhang et al. (Reference Zhang, Zhang, Wang, Cai and Zhang2016) found that even on calcareous soils with a high buffering capacity, fertiliser decreased this capacity and soils acidified. Alternatively, this negative correlation could be due to the acidic soils stabilising the C content, all be it low, through chelation with sesquioxides (Sparks Reference Sparks and Sparks1995). Therefore, as the pH decreases, SOM content could increase in these soils due to the chemical protection chelation provides.

Electrical conductivity correlated with P in primary forest soils and is best explained by the negative charge of labile orthophosphate (PO4 3-), which together with cations will facilitate a higher EC as it has been shown that the concentration of cations and anions positively affects EC (Carmo et al. Reference Carmo, Silva, Lima and Pinheiro2016). Electrical conductivity also correlated with N and C in both primary forest and logged forest soils. These two soil properties make up a large portion of SOM with a pH-dependent charge and, therefore, can hold more cations and water, which would increase the EC as these properties increase. However, Auerswald et al. (Reference Auerswald, Simon and Stanjek2001) found that SOM only had a small influence on EC, which was more correlated with clay, fertilisation history and water content (near wilting point). Additionally, these results are contradictory to Lei et al. (Reference Lei, Yu, Zhou, Zhang, Yu, Zhou and Han2019), who found a negative correlation of EC with C. However, the greater SOM content can also cover P sorption sites on clay minerals and the greater SOM stock can be mineralised to release P, thereby increasing EC (Yusran Reference Yusran2011).

As expected, C and N were highly correlated in all land uses. However, it was surprising that N and C correlated with C:N only in logged forest soils. This was unexpected because it was thought that both N and C would be highly correlated with C:N in all land uses due to the fact the chemicals make up the ratio. Additionally, N had a positive correlation with C:N, but it was expected that N would be negatively correlated with C:N. Therefore, it is thought that if N and C were accumulating, N does so at a slower rate in logged forest soils. This hypothesis was confirmed by the coefficients of N (0.06) and C (1.16) in the linear regression. The difference in the accumulation rates could be due to the logging process and vegetation type, which can leave more lignin and, hence, more C on the soil surface.

Conclusion

This study showed the effect land use has in a tropical landscape and potential depletion of ecosystem services provided by soils. The spatial distribution of soil properties differed on each land use with logged forest showing less spatial autocorrelation and oil palm showing a different spatial structure relative to primary forest. Although the spatial distribution of soil properties changed in logged forest, the soils appear to have little to no degradation, or they have regenerated as the mean values of the soil properties were similar to those of primary forest. On the other hand, the mean soil properties changed in oil palm relative to both primary forest and logged forest, which were associated with degradation of ecosystem services. Correlations of soil properties within each land use also differed between land uses, and the results indicated a loss of pH buffering capacity in oil palm soils. These changes suggested SOM degradation from mechanical removal and management practices such as fertiliser and pesticide application in oil palm soils resulting in threats to biodiversity, soil and water quality and sustainability of oil palm agriculture. Further research should include measuring soil physical properties to better understand the dynamics of the conversion of ecosystems for different land uses.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S026646742300024X

Financial support

This research was funded EU LIFE programme grant number LIFE 17/IPE/CZ/000005 as well as GACR (Czech Science Foundation) standard grant (14-32302S & 17-14409S), GAJU (South Bohemia University) grant 156/2013/P and a European Research Council advanced grant (669609).

Competing interests

Author 1 has no competing interests. Author 2 has no competing interests. Author 3 has no competing interests. Author 4 has no competing interests. Author 5 is on the editorial board in the Journal for Tropical Ecology.

Ethical statement

None.

References

Adviento-Borbe, MAA, Doran, JW, Drijber, RA and Dobermann, A (2006) Soil electrical conductivity and water content affect nitrous oxide and carbon dioxide emissions in intensively managed soils. Journal of Environmental Quality 35, 19992010. https://doi.org/10.2134/jeq2006.0109 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amatya, IM, Kansakar, BR, Tare, V and Fiksdal, L (2011) Role of pH on biological nitrification process. Journal of the Institute of Engineering 8, 119125. https://doi.org/10.3126/jie.v8i1-2.5102 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amundson, R and Jenny, H (1991) The place of humans in the state factor theory of ecosystems and their soils. Soil Science 151, 99109. https://doi.org/doi:10.1097/00010694-199101000-00012 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andriesse, JP and Schelhaas, RM (1987) A monitoring study of nutrient cycles in soils used for shifting cultivation under various climatic conditions in Tropical Asia. II. Nutrient stores in biomass and soil--results of baseline studies. Agricultural Water Management 19, 285310.Google Scholar
Auerswald, K, Simon, S and Stanjek, H (2001) Influence of soil properties on electrical conductivity under humid water regimes. Soil Science 166, 382390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bartlett, MS (1937) Properties of sufficiency and statistical tests. Royal Society 160, 268282. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-0919-5_8 Google Scholar
Basiron, Y (2007) Palm oil production through sustainable plantations. European Journal of Lipid Science and Technology 109(4), 289295. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejlt.200600223 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beckett, PHT and Burrough, PA (1971) The relation between cost and utility in soil survey. European Journal of Soil Science 22, 466480. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2389.1971.tb01631.x CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benhin, JKA (2006) Agriculture and deforestation in the Tropics: A critical theoretical and empirical review. Ambio 3, 916.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berry, NJ, Phillips, OL, Ong, RC and Hamer, KC (2008) Impacts of selective logging on tree diversity across a rainforest landscape: the importance of spatial scale. Landscape Ecology 23, 915929. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-008-9248-1 Google Scholar
Brevik, EC, Fenton, TE and Lazari, A (2006) Soil electrical conductivity as a function of soil water content and implications for soil mapping. Precision Agriculture 7, 393404. https://doi.org/doi.org/10.1007/s11119-006-9021-x CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carmo, DL, Silva, CA, Lima, JM and Pinheiro, GL (2016) Electrical conductivity and chemical composition of soil solution: comparison of solution samplers in Tropical Soils. Revista Brasileira de Ciência do Solo 40, 117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carpenter, ASR, Caraco, NF, Correll, DL, Howarth, RW, Sharpley, AN and Smith, VH (1998) Nonpoint pollution of surface waters with phosphorus and nitrogen. Ecological Applications 8, 559568.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Center for International Forestry Research (1998) Dipterocarps: Taxonomy, Ecology and Silviculture. Jakarta, Indonesia: Center for International Forestry Research.Google Scholar
Corley, RHV and Tinker, PB (2015) The Oil Pam, 5th ed. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corwin, DL and Lesch, SM (2005) Characterizing soil spatial variability with apparent soil electrical conductivity: I. Survey protocols. Computers and Electronics in Agriculture 46, 103133. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compag.2004.11.002 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dressen, PM, Buurman, P and Permadhy, RR (1976) The Influence of Shifting Cultivation on a Podzolic Soil from Central Kalimantan. Peat and Podzolic Soils and Their Potential for Agriculture in Indonesia. Bogor: Soil Research Institute, pp. 95105.Google Scholar
Elias, DMO, Robinson, S, Both, S, Goodall, T, Majalap-lee, N, Ostle, NJ and Mcnamara, NP (2020) Soil microbial community and litter quality controls on decomposition across a tropical forest disturbance gradient. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change 354, 18691883. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1999.0528 Google Scholar
Ewers, RM, Didham, RK, Fahrig, L, Hector, A, Holt, RD, Kapos, V, Reynolds, G, Sinun, W, Snaddon, JL and Turner, EC (2011) A large-scale forest fragmentation experiment : the stability of altered forest ecosystems project. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 366, 32923302. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2011.0049 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
FAO and UNEP (2020) The State of the World’s Forests 2020: Forests, Biodiversity and People. Rome, Italy: FAO. https://doi.org/doi.org/10.4060/ca8642en Google Scholar
Flynn, T, Rozanov, A, Ellis, F, Clercq, W and Clarke, C (2020) Farm-scale soil patterns derived from automated terrain classification. Catena (Amst) 185, 104311. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.catena.2019.104311 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guerrero, R, Gomes, T and Lollo, A (2020) Mapping Potential Zones for Ecotourism Ecosystem Services as a Tool to Promote Landscape Resilience and Development in a Brazilian Municipality. https://doi.org/10.3390/su122410345 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haile, NS and Lee, DTC (1997) Malaysia: Sabah, in: Encyclopedia of European and Asian Regional Geology. Dordrech: Springer. https://doi.orgdoi.org/10.1007/1-4020-4495-X_65 Google Scholar
Hastie, T, Tibshirani, R and Friedman, J (2009) The Elements of Statistical Learning, 2nd ed. Springer Series in Statistics. Springer Science. https://doi.org/10.1007/b94608_1 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haynes, RJ and Swift, RS (1986) Effects of soil acidification and subsequent leaching on levels of extracable nutrients in a soil. Plant and Soil 95, 327336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson, J and Osbourne, D (2000) The oil palm in all our lives: how this came about. Endevour 24, 6368. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0160-9327(00)01293-X CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hossain, B, Rahman, M, Biswas, JC, Miah, MU, Akhter, S and Maniruzzaman, M, Choudhury, AK, Ahmed, F, Shiragi, HK and Kalra, N (2017) Carbon mineralization and carbon dioxide emission from organic matter added soil under different temperature regimes. International Journal of Recycling of Organic Waste in Agriculture 6, 311319. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40093-017-0179-1 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hothorn, T, Hornik, K and Zeileis, A (2006) ctree: Conditional Inference Trees. Cran. At.R-Project. Org. https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/ctree-%3A-Conditional-Inference-Trees-Hothorn-Hornik/b6df029fd6ea4183f2388854962764c7a956f017 Google Scholar
Jaafar, WSWM, Said, NFS, Maulud, KNA, Uning, R, Latif, MT, Kamarulzaman, AMM, Mohan, M, Pradhan, B, Saad, SNM, Broadbent, EN, Cardil, A, Silva, CA and Takriff, MS (2020) Carbon emissions from oil palm induced forest and peatland conversion in sabah and Sarawak, Malaysia. Forests 11, 122. https://doi.org/10.3390/f11121285 Google Scholar
Johnston, J (1972) Generalized Least-Squares. Econometric Methods. New York: McGraw-Hill,pp. 607650.Google Scholar
Khan, M and Mohammad, F (2014) Eutrophication: challenges and solutions. In Ansari, A and Gill, S (eds), Eutrophication: Causes, Consequences and Contro. Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 115. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7814-6_1 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khasanah, N, van Meine, N, Ningsih, H and Rahayu, S (2015) Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment Carbon neutral? No change in mineral soil carbon stock under oil palm plantations derived from forest or non-forest in Indonesia. Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment 211, 195206. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2015.06.009 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kleinschmit, D, Ferraz Ziegert, R and Walther, L (2021) Framing illegal logging and its governance responses in Brazil – a structured review of diagnosis and prognosis. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change 4, 624072. https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2021.624072 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koh, L and Wilcove, D (2007) Cashing in palm oil for conservation. Nature 448, 993994. https://doi.org/10.1038/448993a CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Krejčová, J, Vicentini, F, Flynn, T, Mudrák, O and Frouz, J (2021) Biodiversity loss caused by subsurface pipe drainage is difficult to restore. Ecological Engineering 170, 106336. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2021.106336 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kumagai, T and Porporato, A (2012) Drought-induced mortality of a Bornean tropical rain forest amplified by climate change. Journal of Geophysical Research 117, 113. https://doi.org/10.1029/2011JG001835 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuntashula, E, Chabala, LM and Mulenga, BP (2014) Impact of minimum tillage and crop rotation as climate change adaptation strategies on farmer welfare in Smallholder Farming Systems of Zambia. Journal of Sustainable Development 7, 95. https://doi.org/10.5539/jsd.v7n4p95 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lal, R (2021) Soil conservation and ecosystem sercies. International Soil and Water Conservation Research 2, 3647. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2095-6339(15)30021-6 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee-Cruz, L, Edwards, DP, Tripathi, BM and Adams, JM (2013) Impact of logging and forest conversion to oil palm plantations on soil bacterial communities in borneo. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 79, 72907297. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02541-13 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lei, Z, Yu, Dongwei, Zhou, F, Zhang, Y, Yu, Deliang, Zhou, Y and Han, Y (2019) Changes in soil organic carbon and its influencing factors in the growth of Pinus sylvestris var. mongolica plantation in Horqin Sandy Land, Northeast China. Scientific Reports 9, 112. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-52945-5 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Levenes, H (1960) Contributions to Probability and Statistics: Essays in Honor of Harold Hotelling. Redwood City, C.A.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Lima, TA, Beuchle, R, Griess, VC, Verhegghen, A and Vogt, P (2020) Spatial patterns of logging-related disturbance events: a multi-scale analysis on forest management units located in the Brazilian Amazon. Landscape Ecology 35, 20832100. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-020-01080-y CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lükewille, A and Alewell, C (2008) Acidification. Earth Systems and Environmental Sciences 2, 233241.Google Scholar
Lyczak, SJ, Kabrick, JM and Knapp, BO (2021) Long-term effects of organic matter removal, compaction, and vegetation control on tree survival and growth in coarse-textured, low-productivity soils. Forest Ecology and Management 496, 119428. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2021.119428 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahdi, E, Abuzaid, AH and Atta, AMA (2020) Empirical variogram for achieving the best valid variogram. Communications for Statistical Applications and Methods 27, 547568. https://doi.org/10.29220/CSAM.2020.27.5.547 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matheron, G (1963) Principles of geostatistics. Society of Economic Geologists 58, 12461266. https://doi.org/10.2113/gsecongeo.58.8.1246 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, KS and Geisseler, D (2018) Temperature sensitivity of nitrogen mineralization in agricultural soils. Biology and Fertility of Soils 54, 853860. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00374-018-1309-2 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osman, R, Phua, M-H, Ling, ZY and Kamlun, KU (2012) Monitoring of deforestation rate and trend in Sabah between 1990 and 2008 using multitemporal landsat data. Journal of Forest Science (Prague) 28, 144151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palm, CA (ed) (2005) Slash-and-Burn Agriculture: The Search for Alternative. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Pearson, K (1901) On lines and planes of closest fit to systems of points in space. The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science 2, 559572. https://doi.org/doi.org/10.1080/14786440109462720 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poore, J and Nemecek, T (2018) Reducing food’s environmental impacts through producers and consumers. Science 360, 987992. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaq0216 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Qaim, M, Sibhatu, KT, Siregar, H and Grass, I (2020) Environmental, economic, and social consequences of the oil palm boom. Annual Review of Resource Economics 12, 321344. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-resource-110119 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quan, Q, Wang, C, He, N, Zhang, Z, Wen, X, Su, H, Wang, Q and Xue, J (2014) Forest type affects the coupled relationships of soil C and N mineralization in the temperate forests of northern China. Scientific Reports 4, 18. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep06584 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabalais, NN (2002) Nitrogen in aquatic ecosystems. AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment 31, 102112. https://doi.org/10.1579/0044-7447-31.2.102 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ragland, JL and Coleman, NT (1960) The hydrolysis of aluminum salts in clay and soil systems. Soil Science Society of America Journal 24, 457460. https://doi.org/10.2136/sssaj1960.03615995002400060013x CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reynolds, G, Payne, J, Sinun, W, Mosigil, G and Walsh, RPD (2011) Changes in forest land use and management in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo, 1990–2010, with a focus on the Danum Valley region. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society Biological Sciences 366, 31683176. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2011.0154 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sakurai, K (1999) Soils and agriculture in Borneo. Tropics 9, 2740. https://doi.org/10.3759/tropics.9.27 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shapiro, SS and Wilk, MB (1965) An analysis of variance test for normality (complete samples). Biometrika 52, 591. https://doi.org/10.2307/2333709 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sigurdarson, JJ, Svane, S and Karring, H (2018) The molecular processes of urea hydrolysis in relation to ammonia emissions from agriculture. Reviews in Environmental Science and Biotechnology 17, 241258. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11157-018-9466-1 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, VH, Tilman, GD and Nekola, JC (1999) Eutrophication: impacts of excess nutrient inputs on freshwater, marine, and terrestrial ecosystems. Environmental Pollution 100, 179196. https://doi.org/10.1002/iroh.201101498 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Smits, WTM (1994) Dipterocarpaceae: Mycorrhizae and Regeneration. Wageningen: Wageningen University.Google Scholar
Spalding, RF, Watts, DG, Schepers, JS, Burbach, ME, Exner, ME, Poreda, RJ and Martin, GE (2001) Controlling nitrate leaching in irrigated agriculture. Ground Water Quality 30, 11841194.Google ScholarPubMed
Sparks, DL (1995) Chemistry of soil organic matter. In Sparks, DL (ed), Environmental Soil Chemistry. London: Academic Press, pp. 75115. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-656445-7.50007-3 Google Scholar
Stottlemyer, R, Rhoades, C and Steltzer, H (2001) Soil temperature, moisture, and carbon and nitrogen mineralization at a Taiga-Tundra Ecotone, Noatak National Preserve, Northwestern Alaska. Studies by the US Geological Survey Professional Paper 1678, 127137.Google Scholar
Sundram, S (2010) Growth effects by arbuscular mycorrhiza fungi on oil palm seedlings. Journal of Oil Palm Research 22, 796802.Google Scholar
R Core Team (2017) R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. https://www.r-project.org/ Google Scholar
Tripathi, BM, Edwards, DP, Mendes, LW, Kim, M, Dong, K, Kim, H and Adams, JM (2016) The impact of tropical forest logging and oil palm agriculture on the soil microbiome. Molecular Ecology 25, 22442257. https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.13620 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tuma, J, Fleiss, S, Eggleton, P, Frouz, J, Klimes, P, Lewis, OT, Yusah, KM and Fayle, TM (2019) Logging of rainforest and conversion to oil palm reduces bioturbator diversity but not levels of bioturbation. Applied Soil Ecology 144, 123133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Uhl, C, Clark, K, Clark, H and Murphy, P (1981) Early plant succession after cutting and burning in the uer Rio Negro region of the Amazon basin. Journal of Ecology 69, 631649.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Wambeke, A (1992) Soils of the Tropics – Properties and Appraisal. New York: McGraw-Hill.Google Scholar
Walsh, RPD and Newbery, DM (1999) The ecoclimatology of Danum, Sabah, in the context of the world’s rainforest regions, with particular reference to dry periods and their impact. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences 354, 18691883.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Watanabe, FS and Olsen, SR (1965) Test of an ascorbic acid method for determining phosphorus in water and NaHCO3 extracts from soil. Soil Science Society of America 29, 677678. https://doi.org/doi.org/10.2136/sssaj1965.03615995002900060025x CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Webster, R and Oliver, MA (2001) Geostatistics for Environmental Scientists. Statistics in Practice. Chichester: Wiley.Google Scholar
Winkler, K, Fuchs, R, Rounsevell, M and Herold, M (2021) Global land use changes are four times greater than previously estimated. Nature Communications 12, 2501. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-22702-2 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
World Resource Institute (1991) World Resources. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Yaalon, DH and Yaron, B (1966) Framework for man-made soil changes: an outline of metapedogenesis. Soil Science 104, 272277.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yusran, FH (2011) The relationship between phosphate adsorption and soil organic carbon from organic matter addition. Journal of Tropical Soils 15, 110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zbíral, J, Honsa, I and Malý, S (1997) Jednotné pracovní postupyJednotné pracovní postupy, 1st ed. Brno: ÚKZÚZ.Google Scholar
Zeileis, A and Hothorn, T (2015) partykit : a toolkit for recursive partitioning. Journal of Machine Learning Research 16, 39053909.Google Scholar
Zhang, Y, Zhang, S, Wang, R, Cai, J and Zhang, Y (2016) Impacts of fertilization practices on pH and the pH buffering capacity of calcareous soil. Soil Science & Plant Nutrition 62, 432439. https://doi.org/10.1080/00380768.2016.1226685 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Site within the surrounding area (a), sampling clusters (b) and sampling orientation in each cluster extending from the GPS placed at the black dot (c). Numbers represent how the coordinates were manually entered for each observation. PF: Primary Forest; LF: Logged Forest; OP: Oil Palm.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Flow chart of the process used to capture the variation of measured soil properties.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Variograms with the trends for primary forest (PF), logged forest (LF) and oil palm (OP) being green, blue and yellow, respectively. The points represent the semivariance between observation pairs, while the curve is the model of the observation pairs.

Figure 3

Table 1. Theoretical variogram models used, goodness of fit (RMSE) and parameters (nugget, sill, range and normalised spatial dependency (NSR) for primary forest, logged forest and oil palm for each soil property.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Boxplot of the significant differences (p<0.01*) of soil properties and land-use types according to the conditional inference trees’ terminal nodes. The horizontal line represents the median, the hinges represent the 25th and 75th quantiles, the vertical lines represent the distance between the 1st and 3rd quartiles, and the points are outliers. PF: Primary Forest; LF: Logged Forest; OP: Oil Palm.

Figure 5

Figure 5. The first two principal components of all soil properties with their contributions to the components (colour of arrows in percent). Ellipsis show the clusters for primary forest (PF), logged forest (LF) and oil palm (OP). The larger the ellipsoid, the more variation in soil properties determined by the observations (points) for the principal components.

Figure 6

Figure 6. Correlation matrix of soil properties within primary forest (PF), logged forest (LF) and oil palm (OP). Blank spaces indicate p-values > 0.01, and therefore, the correlations are not displayed.

Supplementary material: File

Flynn et al. supplementary material

Flynn et al. supplementary material

Download Flynn et al. supplementary material(File)
File 203.3 KB