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1.
The potentiometric titration of water extracts from the upper horizons of taiga-zone soils by salt solutions of heavy metals (Pb, Cu, and Zn) showed that their addition is an additional source of the extract acidity because of the involvement of the metal ions in complexation with water-soluble organic substances (WSOSs). At the addition of 0.01 M water solutions of Al(NO3)3 to water extracts from soils, Al3+ ions are also involved in complexes with WSOSs, which is accompanied by stronger acidification of the extracts from the upper horizon of soddy soils (with a near-neutral reaction) than from the litter of bog-podzolic soil (with a strongly acid reaction). The effect of the Al3+ hydrolysis on the acidity of the extracts is insignificantly low in both cases. A quantitative relationship was revealed between the release of protons and the ratio of free Cu2+ ions to those complexed with WSOSs at the titration of water extracts from soils by a solution of copper salt.  相似文献   

2.
Cores of podzolic soil (monolith lysimeters) were treated for 4.8 yr with 1500 mm yr?1 of either 0.5 mM H2SO4 at pH 3, equivalent to 24 g S m?2 yr?1 (acid treated) or distilled water (controls). The acid treatment was about 37 times greater than the average annual input of H3O+ from rain at the site from which the monoliths were taken. Acid treatment acidified the litter (from pH(CaCl2)3.4 to pH(CaCl2)2.6) and the mineral soil to a depth of 80 cm (mean pH(CaCl2) decrease of 0.2 unit). In the litter and upper A horizon, ion-exchange reactions provided the main neutralizing mechanism, resulting in a decrease in the reserves of extractable (in 2.5 % acetic acid) Ca, Mg, and Mn of about 70 to 80 %. Dissolution of solid phase Al from hydrous oxides provided most neutralization below this depth. Al3+ was the principal soluble Al species throughout the profile. In the litter and upper A horizon, some of the mobilized Al3+ was retained on cation exchange sites resulting in an increase in exchangeable Al. Deeper in the profile, where the exchange sites were effectively saturated with Al3+, no increase in exchangeable Al occurred, and Al3+ was, therefore, available for leaching. Some reversible adsorption of SO4 2?, associated with hydrous Al oxides, occurred in the Bs and C horizons. The results are discussed in relation to possible effects of acid deposition over regions of Europe and N. America.  相似文献   

3.
The Al species in the soid and liquid phases were studied in eight soils developed from slates in a watershed subjected to acid deposition. From soil solution data the mechanisms possibly controlling Al solubility are also discussed. The soils are acidic, organic matter rich and with an exchange complex saturated with Al. In the solid phase, more than 75% of non-crystalline Al was organo-Al complexes, mostly highly stable. In the soil solutions, monomeric inorganic. Al forms were predominant and fluoro-Al complexes were the most abundant species, except in soil solutions of pH<4.8 and Al L/F ratio >3, in which Al3+ predominated and sulphato-Al complexes were relatively abundant. The most stable phases were kaolinite, gibbsite and non-crystalline Al hydroxides. In most samples, Al solubility was controlled by Al-hydroxides. Only in a few cases (solutions of pH 4-5, Al3+ activity >40 µmol L-1 and SO4 content >200 µmol L-1), Al-sulphates such as jurbanite also could exert some control over Al solubility. In adition to these minerals, a possible role of organo-Al complexes or the influence of adsorption reactions of sulphate is considered, especially for samples with very low Al3+ content (<0.5 µmol L-1).  相似文献   

4.
Stability constants describing Al3+ combination with soil polycarboxylates were measured using the methods of Gregor et al. (1955) and Tanford (1961). It is suggested that the high stability of such complexes is derived largely from the electrostatic energy associated with the high surface charge of soluble humus acids. Chemically, the affinity of fulvic acids for Al3+ appeared to be no greater than that of a weak complexant such as adipic or acetic acid. A species distribution model was constructed showing the proportion of soluble Al that is bound by organic complexes. The model uses certain approximations regarding the degree of dissociation of the humus acids, but from measurements of soluble humus and Al in soil solutions it was suggested that these approximations were reasonably valid. The range of the model falls within conditions likely to occur in agricultural topsoils and demonstrates the importance of organic complexants in limiting Al3+ concentrations in natural aqueous systems.  相似文献   

5.
KCl, CaCl2, NH4Cl, NaCl, K2SO4 and KF solutions were used for studying the effects of cations and anions on the dissolution of aluminum and the distribution of aluminum forms respectively. Power of exchanging and releasing aluminum of four kinds of cations was in the decreasing order Ca2+ >K+ >NH4+ >Na+. The dissolution of aluminum increased with the cation concentration. The adsorption affinity of various soils for aluminum was different. The aluminum in the soil with a stronger adsorption affinity was difficult to be exchanged and released by cations. The Al-F complexes were main species of inorganic aluminum at a low concentration of cations, while Al3+ became major species of inorganic aluminum at a high concentration of cations. The results on the effect of anions indicated that the concentrations of total aluminum, three kinds of inorganic aluminum (Al3+, Al-F and Al-OH complexes) and organic aluminum complexes (Al-OM) when SO42- was added into soil suspension were lower than those when Cl- was added. The dissolution of aluminum from soils and the distribution of aluminum forms in solution were affected by the adsorption of F- on the soil. For soils with strong affinity for F-, the concentrations of the three inorganic aluminum species in soil solution after addition of F- were lower than those after addition of Cl-; but for soils with weak affinity for F-, the concentrations of Al3+ and Al-OM were lower and the concentrations of Al-F complexes and total inorganic aluminum after addition of F- were higher than those after addition of Cl-. The increase of F- concentration in soil solution accelerated the dissolution of aluminum from soils.  相似文献   

6.
Aluminum (Al) toxicity to plants in complete nutrient solutions is difficult to relate to Al activity in solution because of precipitation and complexation. Aluminum toxicity was studied for two seedling crops, sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L. Moench) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L. em Thell), at low levels (≤10 μM) in two incomplete nutrient solutions to study plant response to Al alone, Al+PO4 3‐, Al+OH, and Al+PO4 3‐+OH. Relative root length was the bioassay for Al toxicity. ‘Monomeric’ Al was measured using Aluminon and both root length and measured Al were compared to the theoretical Al in solution predicted by the MINTEQA2 equilibrium model.

Low levels of Al were toxic to plant roots with sorghum showing a decrease in relative root length from 1 to 10 μM Al, and wheat showing a decrease from 4 to 10 μM. A mono‐salt background solution (400 μM CaCl2) and a more complex base solution (CaCl2, KNO3, and MgCl2) gave similar root lengths and measured Al values. Phosphate and hydroxyl ameliorated Al toxicity and lowered measured Al in solution, but not to the extent predicted by the model. Adding phosphate (PO4 3‐) or hydroxyl (OH) raised the pH, but again not as high as the model predicted. The difference in toxicity and measured Al were most likely the result of polymers (Al+3) which are toxic, but not measured by the procedure used, or included in the model which showed the Al as being removed from solution by precipitation.  相似文献   

7.
Aluminum concentrations in organoaluminum complexes, mineral polymers, Al(H2O) 6 3+ , Al(OH)(H2O) 5 2+ , Al(OH)2(H2O) 4 + , AlH3SiO 4 2+ , and Al(OH)3(H2O) 3 0 extracted with 0.001 M CaCl2 from the main genetic horizons of a podzolic soil on two-layered deposits were determined experimentally and calculated from thermodynamic equations. It was found that aluminum bound in organic complexes was predominant in extracts from the AE horizon, and mineral polymer aluminum compounds prevailed in extracts from the E and IIBD horizons. In the AE horizon, organoaluminum compounds were a major source of aluminum, which passed into solution predominantly by exchange reactions. In the E horizon, aluminum hydroxide interlayers in soil chlorites were the main source of aluminum, which passed into solution by dissolution reactions. In extracts from the IIBD horizon, aluminum was solubilized by the dissolution of aluminosilicates inherited from the parent rock.  相似文献   

8.
Alleviation by calcium (Ca) of inhibition of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. ‘Ransom'] root elongation by hydrogen (H) and aluminum (Al) was evaluated in a vertical split‐root system. Roots extending from a limed and fertilized soil compartment grew for 12 days into a subsurface compartment containing nutrient solution with treatments consisting of factorial combinations of either pH (4.0, 4.6, and 5.5) and Ca (0.2, 2.0, 10, and 20 mM), Al (7.5, 15, and 30 μM) and Ca (2.0,10, and 20 mM) at pH 4.6, or Ca (2, 7, and 12 mM) levels and counter ions (SO4 and Cl) at pH 4.6 and 15 μM Al. Length of tap roots and their laterals increased with solution Ca concentration and pH value, but decreased with increasing Al level. Length of both tap and lateral roots were greater when Ca was supplied as CaSO4 than as CaCl2, but increasing Ca concentration from 2 to 12 mM had a greater effect on alleviating Al toxicity than Ca source. In the absence of Al, relative root length (RRL) of tap and lateral roots among pH and Ca treatments was related to the Ca:H molar activity ratio of solutions (R2≥0.82). Tap and lateral RRL among solutions with variable concentrations of Al and Ca at pH 4.6 were related to both the sum of the predicted activities of monomeric Al (R2≥0.92) and a log‐transformed and valence‐weighted balance between activities of Ca and selected monomeric Al species (R2≥0.95). In solutions with 15 μM Al at pH 4.6, response of tap and lateral RRL to variable concentrations of CaSO4 and CaCl2 were related to predicted molar activity ratios of both Ca:Al3+ (R2≥0.89) and Ca:3 monomeric Al (R2≥0.90), provided that AISO4 and AI(SO4)2 species were excluded from the latter index. In all experiments H and Al inhibited length of lateral roots more than tap roots, and a greater Ca:H or Ca:Al concentration ratio was required in solutions to achieve similar RRL values as tap roots.  相似文献   

9.
Colorimetric and ion exchange methods are commonly used to distinguish and measure Al species in natural waters. Unfortunately they also include weakly complexed Al species in their ‘reactive' or ‘labile' Al fractions and thus are of limited value for the estimation of free Al3+. Capillary electrophoresis (CE) has the potential for direct measurement of Al3+, and its performance has been verified experimentally. The method also detected the stable and positively charged AlOx+ complex formed with oxalic acid. It was compared with a colorimetric and an ion exchange method by analysing artificial solutions containing low molecular weight organic acids as well as soil extracts and seepage waters and was found to be the only method closely matching the theoretically calculated values of free Al3+. In samples from the upper soil horizons of an acid forest soil less than 14% of total Al was present as free Al3+, whereas the colorimetric method found more than 65%, and the ion exchange method more than 80% of total Al in a ‘reactive' or ‘labile' form. The latter methods thus would seriously overestimate Al toxicity, whereas using CE Al toxicity is likely to be only slightly underestimated.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

Al toxicity in plants is related to the activity of Al3+ and Al‐hydroxy monomers in the soil solution, whereas Al complexed with ligands such as fluoride (F), sulphate (SO4 2‐), and oxalate is not toxic. Estimation of toxic Al relies on measurement of “labile”; Al after short contact times with colorimetric reagents or cation‐exchange resins. However, shifts in equilibrium may result in non‐toxic forms of Al reacting with the complexing agent or resin.

A series of laboratory experiments tested the degree to which labile Al is related to Al3+ in simplified media and compared methods of estimating labile Al in the presence of organic ligands and in soils. Cation‐exchange resins extracted more than the theoretical concentration of Al3+ from solutions containing a range of concentrations of OH and SO4 2‐. More Al was extracted in 15 s by 8‐hydroxy‐quinoline than by Chelex‐100 from solutions of Al‐humate at pH 4. In sands which had been spiked with Al and organic matter, the estimation of labile Al varied with both the method of measurement and type of extract. The cations present in commonly used soil‐extracting chloride solutions can decrease the proportion of organically complexed Al.  相似文献   

11.
Exchange reactions between 0.0in AlCl3 solutions of different pH and Ca-saturated montmorillonite, vermiculite, illite, and soils from the Park Grass Experiment at Rothamsted and the Deerpark Experiment, Wexford, Ireland, showed that Al3+ and Al(OH)2+ were adsorbed from solutions of pH > 4.0 and Al3+ and H+ from solutions of pH < 3.0. When Al was adsorbed, the cation exchange capacity of Ca-saturated soils and clays increased. Conventional Ca: Al exchange isotherms showed that Al3+ was strongly preferred to Ca2+ on all soils and clays. The equilibrium constant for Ca: Al exchange, K, was identical for soils before and after oxidizing their organic matter and did not vary, for any exchanger, with Al-saturation or the initial pH of the AlCl3 solution. This proved the validity of the procedure used for calculating exchangeable Al3+. K values for Ca:Al exchange favoured Al3+ in the order: vermiculite > Park Grass soil > Deerpark soil > illite > montmorillonite. The influence of surface-charge densities of the clay minerals on this order is discussed and a method proposed and tested for calculating the K value of a soil from its mineralogical composition.  相似文献   

12.
Al chemistry was studied in two acidic watersheds, one with a podzol, the other with an acid brown soil, in the Vosges mountains (N.E. France), by analysing both leaching and centrifugation soil solutions and spring waters over 3 yr. In the podzol, Al was mobilized in the eluvial horizons under the predominant influence of organic acidity, then leached down the profile as organic and F-bound Al. Strong undersaturation with respect to proto-imogolite and imogolite showed that the proto-imogolite theory of podzolization could not apply. Al was transferred from the soil to spring water mostly as Al3+ and Al-F. Al3+, as well as additional minor species (AlOH2+, AlSO4 +), originated from the redissolution of the top of the spodic horizons under the influence of both soil solution acidity and the occurrence of mobile anions derived from atmospheric deposition. Conversely, in the acid brown soil, Al mobilization was regulated by nitrate and occurred mainly as Al3+. Most of Al was retained in the deep soil and only traces of monomeric Al reached spring water. In the podzol eluvial horizons, soil solutions were undersaturated with respect to all relevant mineral phases and their chemical composition agree with the concept of a mobilization of Al from the solid soil organic Al and a control of Al3+ activity by complexation reaction with the solid and soluble soil organic matter and F. In the acid brown soil, soil solutions were found to be in equilibrium with natural alunite, and the formation of this mineral, if confirmed, would account for the occurrence of 'open' vermiculites instead of the expected hydroxy-Al interlayered vermiculites. Al solubility control in surface water of both watersheds remains unclear. The Al-F species in both watersheds and the likely control of Al solubility by alunite in the acid brown soil emphasize the influence of acid deposition on Al chemistry in acid watersheds.  相似文献   

13.
Processes governing the mobilization of Al and Cd in podzols and cambisols of S. Sweden having different tree layer vegetation (Picea abies, Fagus sylvatica, or Betula pendula) were investigated. Speciation of Al and Cd in soil solutions were performed by a column cation exchange procedure (cf. Driscoll, 1984) in combination with thermodynamic calculations. Podzols in spruce and beech stands were characterized by a high release of organic compounds from the O/Ah horizons, resulting in a high organic complexation of Al (c. 93%) in the soil solution from the E horizon (15 cm lysimeters). Organic complexes were mainly adsorbed/precipitated in the upper Bh horizon and the overall transport of Al at 50 cm depth was governed by a pH dependent dissolution of a solid-phase Al pool. In the cambisols, inorganic Al forms were predominant at both 15 and 50 cm depth, and Al solubility was closely related to solution pH. Secondary minerals like synthetic gibbsite, jurbanite, kaolinite or imogolite could generally not explain measured solution Al3+ activities. Results instead indicated that the relatively large organically bound solid-phase Al pools present in both soil types could do so. The column fractionation procedure could be used only qualitatively for Cd, but results strongly indicated that Cd-organo complexes contributed significantly to the overall mobilization of Cd in the podzol E horizons. In all other soil solutions, Cd2+ was the predominant species. Both solid-phase and solution chemistry suggests that ion exchange processes controlled the Cd2+ activities in these solutions. All reactive solidphase Cd was extractable by NH4Cl and Cd2+ activities could in most cases effectively be modeled by the use of ion exchange equations. Solubilized Al3+ efficiently competed for exchange sites and played an important role for the Cd mobilization in these soils.  相似文献   

14.
Compositions of soil solution obtained by the following methods were compared with those obtained by lysimetry: centrifugation; 2:1 extracts of air dried (2:1dried) and field moist (2:1moist) samples; saturation extracts; the ‘equilibrium soil pore solution’︁ method using columns with undisturbed (ESPS) and composited soil (ESPScomp); and a method using pressure. Two soil depths of a Spodic Dystric Cambisol at Solling, Germany, were sampled with 10 to 12 replications. A coupled equilibrium model was used to describe the effect of soil to solution ratio on the solution composition. The model included multiple cation exchange and inorganic complexation, and for the subsoil solubility products of AlOHSO4 and Al(OH)3. Saturation extracts gave similar results as lysimetry and thus may be useful for calculating output fluxes. However, biological transformations (N mineralisation, solubilisation of organic matter) occurred during the preparation of saturation extracts. Composition of soil solutions obtained by either 2:1dried extracts or centrifugation differed greatly from the results of other methods, indicating that these two methods may not be the best means to investigate equilibrium soil solutions. The values of molar ion ratios depended largely on the method used to obtain soil solutions: Ca2+/Al3+ ratios for each depth ranged from less than 0.3 (which suggests that liming is required urgently) to greater than 1 (liming not necessary). Modelling described the effect of soil to solution ratio on element concentrations for the methods pressure, saturation extracts, ESPScomp and 2:1moist extracts qualitatively with a few exceptions. The model suggested that differences in element concentrations using these methods may be mainly due to dilution, cation exchange and solubilisation of sparingly soluble salts, depending on the soil to solution ratio used.  相似文献   

15.
Four soils were treated with HNO3, CaCO3 and K2SO4 to enable observation of the response of the soil solution composition and the solution A1 ion activity (Al3+) to the treatments and to time. The clay fraction of three of the soils was dominated by illite, kaolinite and quartz. The fourth was minated by kaolinite and iron oxides. The initial pH in 0.01 M CaCl2 varied between 4.0 and 5.0 and the organic carbon content from 0.7 to 1.1%. The soil solutions from soils dominated by kaolinite, illite and quartz were generally supersaturated with respect to quartz and well ordered kaolinite, and unsaturated with respect to illite. The soil solutions from the soil dominated by kaolin and iron oxide were generally unsaturated with respect to quartz but still saturated with respect to ell crystallized kaolin. Within mineral groups such as Al2SiO5 compounds, A12Si2O5(OH)4 (kaolinite group), and Al(OH)3 (A1 oxide) minerals, the more soluble forms became less supersaturated or unsaturated with time for many treatments. Lime treatment usually increased the ion activity product of AI(OH)3 in all soils, and of minerals with the composition, Al2SiO5, in the illite/kaolinite soils. Acid treatment reduced the apparent solubility of Al(OH)3, and the A1 silicates in the Al2SiO5, and Al2, Si2, O5,(OH)4, mineral groups on all soils. These results are interpreted to indicate that lime treatment led to the formation of trace quantities of more soluble A1 minerals that subsequently controlled (Al3+), whereas acid treatment dissolved trace quantities of such minerals leaving less soluble minerals to control (Al3+). The results suggest that, in mineral soils such as these, (Al3+) is under the control of inorganic dissolution and precipitation processes. These processes conform to expectations given the free energy of various inorganic aluminium compounds. Furthermore the sequence of dissolution and formation processes appears to be governed by the Gay-Lussac—Ostwald step rule.  相似文献   

16.
Alum sludge derived from a municipal wastewater plant was used as a soil amendment in a greenhouse study with barley (Hordeum vulgare) as the test crop. Treatment variables included the soil pH (4.5, 5.1 and 6.5), the amount of Al in the sludge (control = 30 mg AlT/g; alum sludges = 38 and 52 mg AlT/g), and the sludge application rate (100 and 270 kg NT/ha). Soil amendment with the two alum sludges reduced soil pH, increased Al3+ activity in the soil solution, and reduced barley growth over the 6-week experiment. Barley growth decreased as the Al3+ activity in the sludged soil solution increased, but for a given Al3+ the phytotoxicity of Al was markedly pH dependent. For example, at a pH of 5.0 ± 0.1 an Al3+ activity of 0.5 μM was sufficient to inhibit plant growth by about 50% this IC50 value increased five-fold to about 2.5 μM when the soil pH was 4.5 ± 0.1. This decrease in the toxicity of Al50 with acidification was explained in terms of a competitive interaction between the H+-ion and Al3+ at the root surface. Stepwise multiple regression allowed the prediction of aerial leaf biomass from soil pH and sludge application rate.  相似文献   

17.
Conventional K: Al exchange isotherms for montmorillonite showed that Al3+ was strongly preferred to K+ in o-oin solutions. The exchange coefficient, K', calculated using the isotopically exchangeable K, was greater than unity and did not vary with the Al-saturation or with the initial pH of the AlCl3 solutions. Isotherms for vermiculite, illite, and soils in o·oin solutions also showed Al3+-preference but unlike those for montmorillonite were not asymptotic to qAl/qo= 1, qAl being the amount of adsorbed Al and qo the total adsorbed (Al + K), indicating that some of the isotopically exchangeable K could not easily be exchanged by Al3+ ions; this difficultly exchangeable K (DEK) was estimated for each exchanger. K' values for vermiculite, illite, and soils were less than unity and did not vary with Al-saturation or initial pH if the isotopically exchangeable K was corrected for DEK. This showed that K+ was adsorbed more strongly than Al3+. Strengths of K+ adsorption referred to Al3+ as the counter-cation were in order: soils > vermiculite, illite > montmorillonite.  相似文献   

18.
Two sequential extractions with unbuffered 0.1 m BaCl2 were done to study the release of salt-exchangeable H+ and Al from mineral horizons of five Podzols and a Cambisol. Released Al was found to have a charge close to 3+ in all horizons and in both extractions. This finding was supported by the near-equality of the titrated exchangeable acidity (EAT) and the sum of exchangeable acids (EA = He + 3Ale, calculated from the pH and Al concentration of the extract). The ratio between EA of the second and the first extraction was over 0.50 in the Bs2 and C horizons and smaller in the other horizons. H+ was assumed to be in equilibrium with weak acid groups, and the modified Henderson–Hasselbach equation, pKHH = pH ? n log (α/(1 ? α)), was used to explain pH of the extract. The degree of dissociation (α) was calculated as the ratio between effective and potential cation exchange capacity. Value of the empirical constant n was found to be near unity in most horizons. When the monoprotic acid dissociation was assumed in all horizons, pKHH had the same value in both extractions. For Al3+, two equilibrium models were evaluated, describing (i) complexation reactions of Al3+ with soil organic matter, and (ii) equilibrium with Al(OH)3. Apparent equilibrium constants were written as (i) pKo = xpH ? pAl3+, and (ii) log Qgibbs= log Al3+ ? 3log H+. The two extractions gave an average reaction stoichiometry x close to 2 in all horizons. Results suggest that an equilibrium with organic Al complexes can be used to express dissolved Al3+, aluminium being apparently bound to bidentate sites. The value of log Qgibbs was below the solubility of gibbsite (log Kgibbs = 8.04) in many horizons. In addition, log Qgibbs of the second extraction was greater than that of the first extraction in all horizons except the C horizon. This indicates that equilibrium with Al(OH)3 cannot explain dissolved Al3+ in the soils. We propose that the models of pKHH and pKo can be used to simulate exchangeable H+ and Al3+ in soil acidification models.  相似文献   

19.
It has been suggested that surface applications of animal manure can ameliorate both top and subsoil acidity. For that reason, the effects of surface incorporation (0–5 cm) of a high rate of poultry manure to an acid soil on pH and exchangeable and soluble Al in the top‐ and subsoil were investigated in a leaching column study. During the experimental period of 108 d, columns received a total of 875 mm with leaching events occurring after 9, 37, 58, and 86 d. Incorporation of poultry manure into the surface 5 cm resulted in a large rise in pH measured in both 1M KCl and in soil solution. This liming effect was attributed primarily to the substantial CaCO3 content of poultry manure. In the 15–45 cm layer, pHKCl was not significantly different between poultry manure and control treatments but surprisingly, soil‐solution pH was substantially less in the poultry‐manure treatments. Exchangeable Al was significantly less in poultry manure than in control in all soil layers although the effect was most marked in the 0–5 cm layer. However, although concentrations and activities of monomeric Al (Almono), and the proportion of total Al present as Almono, in soil solution were lower under poultry manure than in control in the 0–5 cm layer, the reverse was, in fact, the case in lower soil horizons. This was attributed to a soluble‐salt effect, originating from the large cation content of poultry manure, displacing exchangeable Al3+ and H+ back into soil solution. Indeed, electrical conductivity and concentrations of Ca2+, Mg2+, K+, and Na+ in soil solution were substantially higher in the poultry‐manure than in the control treatments at all soil depths. Poultry‐manure applications also resulted in substantial increases in the concentrations of Ca2+, Mg2+, K+, Na+, Almono, NH , and NO in leachates, particularly at the fourth leaching. It was concluded that although surface application of poultry manure can raise soil pH in the topsoil, increases in soluble‐salt concentrations in soil solution can greatly modify this effect in the subsoil.  相似文献   

20.
This paper presents aluminium (Al)-solubility data for two acid forest soils (Inceptisol and Spodosol), obtained in connection with lysimeter measurements (tension-cup and zero-tension lysimeters) and batch equilibrium experiments. The solubility of Al obtained in the batch experiments was used as a reference to test whether Al3+in soil solutions collected by the lysimeters was in equilibrium with secondary forms of solid-phase Al (Al(OH)3or organically bound Al). The relation between pH and Al3+activity found for the zero-tension lysimeter solutions collected from the Inceptisol agreed well with that obtained in the batch experiment. This suggests that Al3+in the lysimeter solutions were in, or close to, equilibrium with the solid phase, whether this was organically bound Al (A horizon) or an Al(OH)3phase (B horizon). For the tension-cup lysimeters, solutions obtained from the Inceptisol B and Spodosol Bs1 horizons were generally close to equilibrium with respect to secondary solid-phase Al (apparently Al(OH)3; average ion activity product was 109.3and 108.8, respectively), whereas the Inceptisol A and Spodosol Bh solutions were not. The Al solubility in Inceptisol A and Spodosol Bh horizons was consistently higher than that obtained in the batch equilibrium experiment, indicating that the sampled solution partly originated from the underlying horizons. Thus, tension-cup lysimeters should be used with care in soils (or in parts of soil profiles) having steep solute concentration gradients because the soil volume from which the sample is drawn with this lysimeter type seems to be poorly defined.  相似文献   

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