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Coffee pulp accelerates early tropical forest succession on old fields

by Rebecca J. Cole and Rakan A. Zahawi

 

Abstract

 

1. Applying nutrient-rich agricultural by-products, such as fruit peels and pulp, to degraded land has been proposed as a strategy to overcome a number of barriers to tropical forest recovery. While such linkages between agro industry and restoration represent win–win scenarios, practical applications remain largely unexplored.In this case study, we tested coffee pulp as an amendment to catalyze forest succession on post-agricultural land in southern Costa Rica.

 

2. A 0.5-m-deep layer of coffee pulp was deposited across a 35 × 40-m area and an adjacent similar-sized control plot (no coffee pulp addition) was delineated. Over2 years, we measured changes in soil nutrients, ground cover, understory vegetation, tree establishment and canopy cover across both coffee pulp and control treatments.

 

3. Our results show that soil carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorous were substantially elevated in the coffee pulp compared to control treatment after 2 years. Coffee pulp addition significantly altered the ground cover characteristics, eliminating pasture grasses, facilitating establishment of herbaceous plants and increasing the percent area covered by leaf litter.

 

4. Early-successional trees and shrubs established quickly in the coffee pulp treatment, reaching 30-fold greater mean basal area and 20-fold greater woody stem density (>1-cm-dbh) compared to the control treatment. Structural metrics showed fourfold greater mean canopy height in the coffee pulp compared to control treatment. Canopy height >5 m was >40% in the coffee pulp but was negligible (<3%) in the control treatment.

 

5. Our study highlights the significant potential for using agricultural waste, such as coffee pulp, to jump start forest succession on degraded tropical lands and encourages further research to optimize linkages between agro industry and restoration.

 

KEYWORDS agricultural by-products, agricultural waste, amendments, degraded pastures, restoration, soil, tropical forest.

 

 

To read the full original paper, visit this DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.12054. To read a summary of the paper from a site that distills the content to a long press release, visit ScienceDaily

 

Forests on caffeine: Coffee waste can boost forest recovery

 

Date: March 29, 2021
Source: British Ecological Society
Summary: A new study finds that coffee pulp, a waste product of coffee production, can be used to speed up tropical forest recovery on post agricultural land.

 

British Ecological Society. "Forests on caffeine: Coffee waste can boost forest recovery." ScienceDaily, 29 March 2021.

 

Note: This paper was published in the Open Access journal Ecological Solutions and Evidence. This kind of peer review journal appears online and any publication fees are typically paid to the publisher by the university academic department of the main authors, allowing the full text to be published and free to read on the publisher's site. That said, this paper is protected by copyright and may not be duplicated here. In order to share it a durable link must be provided to the paper. The abstract and keywords are typically all that may be shared here.

 

 

 

 

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