Relatingmicrofeatures of soil organic matter to C stabilisation: optical microscopy, SEM-EDS, abiotic oxidation
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2014
Abstract:
We investigated the relationships between microscale
distribution of soil organic matter (SOM) features and
their stability by combining optical microscopy, SEM-EDS
analysis and NaClO oxidation of soil thin sections on five
soils from Harwood Forest in Northumberland (UK) differently
affected by water stagnation. Plant organs at different
stages of decomposition and amorphous organic matter were
observed by optical microscopy in all samples. SOM
microfeature distribution, size of SOM features and the relation
with the C-to-N ratio suggested that amorphous features
could be the end-products of organ transformation. SEM-EDS
elemental analysis showed that amorphous material had
higher Si/C, Al/C and Fe/C molar ratios than organs, clearly
pointing to interactions with the soil inorganic phases, which
contributed to SOM stabilisation. Soil porosity coupled with
water stagnation seemed to affect the Fe–SOM interactions as
a greater proportion of small water retention pores (10–
50 μm) was associated with higher abundance of Fe-rich
amorphous organic features. The higher chemical stability of
amorphous featureswas confirmed by oxidation.After NaClO
treatment, organs were almost totally removed, while amorphous
organic material was less affected both morphologically
and chemically. Our results demonstrate that in water-affected
soils local environment defined by the pore system affects the
distribution of SOM microfeatures and that the highest resistance
to oxidation of the amorphous features is attributable to
the formation of organic–inorganic associations. The proposed
combined approach seems to be a promising mean to
investigate SOM dynamics by relating features to stability.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Elenco autori:
G. Falsone; C. A. Wilson; J. M. Cloy; M. C. Graham; E. Bonifacio
Link alla scheda completa:
Link al Full Text:
Pubblicato in: