“…Although Sumatra, Indonesia, represents a hot spot of land-use change, especially for the establishment of rubber and oil palm plantations, how this affects soil CO 2 and CH 4 fluxes remains highly uncertain for the following reasons: (1) most studies relating land-use change to trace gas emissions have been conducted in South and Central America (Keller and Reiners, 1994;Davidson et al, 2000;Veldkamp et al, 2001;Salimon et al, 2004) and only few studies were conducted in southeast Asia (Ishizuka et al, 2002;Veldkamp et al, 2008); (2) most studies have focused on forest conversion to traditional land-use types, such as maize, pastures, slash-and-burn agriculture, cacao and coffee, and less on the rapidly expanding tree cash crops such as rubber and oil palm; (3) the few studies that reported CO 2 and CH 4 fluxes from oil palm plantations were conducted on peat soils (Melling et al, 2005a, b), whereas the studies conducted on mineral soils, where most of the rubber and oil palm plantations are located, were either conducted without spatial replication, covered only short periods of measurements (Ishizuka et al, 2002;Adachi et al, 2005;Werner et al, 2006) or measured only once (Ishizuka et al, 2005). It is imperative that better information becomes available on trace gas fluxes from these economically important and rapidly expanding rubber and oil palm plantations.…”