Free and intra-aggregate organic matter as indicators of soil quality change in volcanic soils under contrasting crop rotations

Zagal, E., Cordova, C., Sohi, S. P. and Powlson, David (2013) Free and intra-aggregate organic matter as indicators of soil quality change in volcanic soils under contrasting crop rotations. Soil Use and Management, 29 (4). pp. 531-539. 10.1111/sum.12070
Copy

Soil physical fractionation techniques may provide indicators of changing soil organic carbon (SOC) content; however, they have not been widely tested on volcanic soils (Andisols). In this study, we assessed two fractions as potential indicators in volcanic soils, using two sites in Chile converted from natural grassland to arable and mixed crop rotations, 8 and 16yr previously. In the 8-yr experiment, SOC had declined under all rotations, with smaller changes where the rotation included 3 or 5yr of perennial pasture. Whereas the average SOC was only 76% of the level in the preceding natural grassland, the corresponding value after 16yr for the second site was 98% (and 93% under continuous arable), probably reflecting its high allophane clay content. The fractionation procedure tested proved applicable to both Andisols, but the intra-aggregate light fraction (IA-SOM, isolated in sodium iodide solution at 1.80g/cm(3) after ultrasonic dispersion) accounted for a very small proportion of total SOC (<1%). We suggest that in Andisols, the free light fraction (FR-SOM, isolated in sodium iodide at solution of the same density, but prior to ultrasonic dispersion) is stabilised to a greater extent than in nonvolcanic soils, and the intra-aggregate fraction plays a more minor role as a pool of intermediate turnover. The relative value of each fraction needs to be confirmed through dynamic experiments, using more sites, and including situations where SOC content is initially low.

mail Request Copy

picture_as_pdf
Zagal_et_al-2013-Soil_Use_and_Management.pdf
subject
Published Version
lock
Restricted to Repository staff only
Creative Commons Attribution
Available under Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

Request Copy

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core RIOXX2 XML OpenURL ContextObject in Span METS HTML Citation ASCII Citation MODS Data Cite XML MPEG-21 DIDL OpenURL ContextObject OPENAIRE
Export

Downloads