KnE Social Sciences

ISSN: 2518-668X

The latest conference proceedings on humanities, arts and social sciences.

Organic Matter Transformation in the Shallow Soils of European Russia Depending on the Underlying Rock

Published date: Feb 11 2022

Journal Title: KnE Social Sciences

Issue title: Integration Processes in the Russian and International Research Domain: Experience and Prospects

Pages: 6–11

DOI: 10.18502/kss.v7i3.10416

Authors:

Olga Bakhmet - obahmet@mail.ru

Abstract:

Abstract. This study undertook to map the composition and stock of organic matter in soils formed on bedrock types differing in resistance to weathering and mineralogical composition. Studies of the specific features of organic matter transformation in soils formed over bedrock have demonstrated differences depending on the parent rock characteristics. The influencing factors include the chemical composition of the rock and its weatherability. Where rocks have a rich composition – basic and ultrabasic – but are deeply metamorphosed (and, hence, resistant to weathering), there forms primitive soils with a low content of organic matter, which is mostly confined to the top organic horizon. Besides, organic matter in such soils is of fulvic nature, which is generally typical of the zonal soils. Primitive soils are not very fertile, both due to the relatively low content of organic matter and to the limited availability of mineral nutrients for plants. The fertility of shallow soils on acid parent rocks is limited by high acidity and a low content of mineral nutrients both in the parent rock eluvium and in the soil’s native mineral material. The productivity of soils on basic rocks is somewhat higher. The conditions for the biota are the most favorable in shallow soils forming on carbonate rocks. They contain substantial amounts of nutrients and have comparatively low weatherability, which makes these resources available. In the organic matter of these soils, humic acids prevail over fulvic acids, even if slightly. Organic matter stores in such soils are distributed more evenly, with a substantial share concentrated in mineral horizons, in the root layer.

Keywords: soil, organic matter, parent rock

References:

[1] Heckman K, Rasmussen C, Welty-Bernard A, Schwartz E. Geologic controls of soil carbon cycling and microbial dynamics in temperate conifer forests. Chemical Geology. 2009;267(1-2):12-23.
[2] Samec P, Voženílek V, Vondráková A, Macku J. Diversity of forest soils and bedrock in soil regions of the Central-European highlands (Czech Republic). Catena. 2018;160:95-102.
[3] Djukic I, Zehetner F, Tatzber M, Gerzabek MH. Soil organic-matter stocks and characteristics along an alpine elevation gradient. Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science. 2010;173(1):30-38.
[4] Kammer A, Hagedorn F, Rigling A et al. Treeline shifts in the Ural mountains affect soil organic matter dynamics. Global Change Biology. 2009;15(6):1570-1583.

Download
HTML
Cite
Share
statistics

145 Abstract Views

126 PDF Downloads