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      Effects of an experimental drought on the functioning of a cacao agroforestry system, Sulawesi, Indonesia

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      Date
      2010
      Author
      Luitgard Schwendenmann
      Edzo Veldkamp
      Gerald Moser
      Dirk Hölscher
      Michael Köhler
      Yann Clough
      Anas, Iswandi
      Djajakirana, Gunawan
      Stefan Erasmi
      Dietrich Hertel
      Daniela Leitner
      Christoph Leuschner
      Beate Michalzik
      Pavel Propastin
      Aiyen Tjoa
      Teja Tscharntke
      Oliver Van Straaten
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      Abstract
      Agroforestry systems may play a critical role in reducing the vulnerability of farmers' livelihood to droughts as tree-based systems provide several mechanisms that can mitigate the impacts from extreme weather events. Here, we use a replicated throughfall reduction experiment to study the drought response of a cacao/Gliricidia stand over a 13-month period. Soil water content was successfully reduced down to a soil depth of at least 2.5 m. Contrary to our expectations we measured only relatively small nonsignificant changes in cacao (−11%) and Gliricidia (−12%) sap flux densities, cacao leaf litterfall (+8%), Gliricidia leaf litterfall (−2%), soil carbon dioxide efflux (−14%), and cacao yield (−10%) during roof closure. However, cacao bean yield in roof plots was substantially lower (−45%) compared with control plots during the main harvest following the period when soil water content was lowest. This indicates that cacao bean yield was more sensitive to drought than other ecosystem functions. We found evidence in this agroforest that there is complementary use of soil water resources through vertical partitioning of water uptake between cacao and Gliricidia. This, in combination with acclimation may have helped cacao trees to cope with the induced drought. Cacao agroforests may thus play an important role as a drought-tolerant land use in those (sub-) tropical regions where the frequency and severity of droughts is projected to increase. ________________________________________ Received 30 April 2009 and accepted 19 June 2009 Keywords cacao yield • CO2 efflux • fine root biomass • leaf litterfall • plant water uptake • sap flux • shade trees • soil water • throughfall reduction
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      http://repository.ipb.ac.id/handle/123456789/28130
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      Indonesia DSpace Group 
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