A farm-scale investigation of the organic matter composition and soil chemistry of Andisols as influenced by land use and management
2018
Kov, Ritha | Camps-Arbestain, Marta | Calvelo Pereira, Roberto | Suárez-Abelenda, Manuel | Shen, Qinhua | Garbuz, Stanislav | Macías Vazquez, Felipe
Andisols are characterised by having abundant reactive Al in the form of short-range ordered (SRO) Al constituents and organo-Al complexes, which facilitates the accumulation of soil organic matter (OM). However, recent studies of New Zealand pastoral systems have reported loss of carbon (C) from Andisols when under intense management. This study compares the organic and inorganic chemistry of Andisols on two adjacent pasture sites under different pastoral management regimes (Paddock 2 being more intensively managed than Paddock 1), as well as under a nearby pine stand (Forest). Mean soil pH-H₂O in Forest (5.3) was significantly lower (P < 0.05) than that in Paddock 1 (5.7), which itself was significantly lower (P < 0.05) than in Paddock 2 (6.1). Soil C concentrations were significantly higher (P < 0.05) in the soils under pasture than under pine (63.8 g C/kg), and C in Paddock 1 (98.1 g C/kg) was significantly higher (P < 0.05) than in Paddock 2 (84.1 g C/kg). The ratio of Al in organo-Al complexes (as estimated with sodium pyrophosphate) to the sum of Al in both SRO and organo-Al complexes (Alₚ/Alₒ) was significantly smaller (P < 0.05) as the alkalinity of the soils increased (0.38, 0.23, 0.16 for Forest, Paddock 1 and Paddock 2, respectively). At the molecular level, soils under Forest had a larger relative contribution of degraded products of plant polysaccharides than those under pasture, while these had a larger contribution of fresh (e.g. cellulose and cutan/suberan aliphatic structures) and N-rich OM (e.g., microbial fingerprints, denoting a high microbial activity). Dissolved organic C content in the rhizosphere of pasture species was similar between paddocks, but Paddock 2 had a significantly (P < 0.05) greater contribution of organic acids of MW < 500 Da and higher pH (6.8 vs. 6.2). The results (1) confirm the common enrichment in organic C of New Zealand top soils under pasture compared to those under pine, and (2) reveal that the changes in the soil chemistry associated with pasture management may weaken the ability of these soils to preserve OM.
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