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54   The Chemistry and Fertility of Soils under Tropical Weeds













                           Chapter 4


                           Effects of Forest Conversion



                                                             4.1  Effects  on Weeds and Other Vegetation
                                                                 4.2  Effects on Soil Enzymatic Activities
                                                               4.3  Effects on Soil Chemistry and Fertility
                                                                                    Key Questions



                           L
                               and-use  conversion  may  cause  tremendous  effects  on  plant  cover,  soil
                               biodiversity,  and  soil  properties.    Salam  (2014;  2017)  shows  that  forest
                               conversion  from  primary  forest  to  secondary  forest  and  finally  to  coffee
                           plantation  and  the  more  intensive  uses  of  cultivated  lands  caused  significant
                           changes in weed dominances and soil chemistry and fertility.  Lampung that was
                           originally covered by the primary forest has changed to the secondary forest and a
                           big part of it had in the last five decades been converted to plantations and other
                           uses  such  as  residential  areas  and  cultivated  lands.    The  composition  of  West
                           Lampung  area,  for  example,  is  shown  in  Table  4.1,  comparing  the  composition
                           between  the  existing  land-uses  in  1978,  1984,  and  1990,  only  about  12  years
                           duration  from  1978  to  1990.    This  trend  alone  tells  about  the  very  significant
                           changes in plant cover, soil biodiversity, and soil chemistry and fertility since every
                           land-use  may  show  different  covers,  biodiversity,  and  soil  chemical  and  fertility
                           properties.
                              Clearly  shown  in  Table  4.1  that  in  1978  the  primary  forest  covered  about
                           32.60% of the area.  Six years later, the coverage decreased to 21.39% in 1984 and
                           to 12.72% for the following 12 years in 1990 (Salam et al., 1998b).  The decreases

                           Abdul Kadir Salam and Nanik Sriyani – 2019
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