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1.
The dynamics of incorporation of fresh organic residues into the various fractions of soil organic matter have yet to be clarified in terms of chemical structures and mechanisms involved. We studied by 13C‐dilution analysis and CPMAS‐13C‐NMR spectroscopy the distribution of organic carbon from mixed or mulched maize residues into specific defined fractions such as carbohydrates and humic fractions isolated by selective extractants in a year‐long incubation of three European soils. The contents of carbohydrates in soil particle size fractions and relative δ13C values showed no retention of carbohydrates from maize but rather decomposition of those from native organic matter in the soil. By contrast, CPMAS‐13C‐NMR spectra of humic (HA) and fulvic acids (FA) extracted by alkaline solution generally indicated the transfer of maize C (mostly carbohydrates and peptides) into humic materials, whereas spectra of organic matter extracted with an acetone solution (HE) indicated solubilization of an aliphatic‐rich, hydrophobic fraction that seemed not to contain any C from maize. The abundance of 13C showed that all humic fractions behaved as a sink for C from maize residues but the FA fraction was related to the turnover of fresh organic matter more than the HA. Removal of hydrophobic components from incubated soils by acetone solution allowed a subsequent extraction of HA and, especially, FA still containing much C from maize. The combination of isotopic measurements and NMR spectra indicated that while hydrophilic compounds from maize were retained in HA and FA, hydrophobic components in the HE fraction had chemical features similar to those of humin. Our results show that the organic compounds released in soils by mineralization of fresh plant residues are stored mainly in the hydrophilic fraction of humic substances which are, in turn, stabilized against microbial degradation by the most hydrophobic humic matter. Our findings suggest that native soil humic substances contribute to the accumulation of new organic matter in soils.  相似文献   

2.
Soil organic matter was extracted by a mixture of O.IM Na4P2O: O.IM NaOH from a chronosequence of weakly weathered soils developed on aeolian sand, and fractionated into humin (non-extractable), humic acid, and fulvic acid. The mass of total organic carbon in the profiles, the 14C content and the 13C/12C ratios were also determined. The weight of total carbon increased rapidly at first and then gradually without attaining a steady state. This trend was also shown by the humin and fulvic acid fractions, but the humic acid fraction appeared to have reached a maximum after about 3000 years. The order of total weights of the organic fractions was humin > fulvic acid > humic acid. The evidence suggests that the proportions of the humic fractions formed by decomposition are related to soil differences but not to vegetation. The greater part of the plant material found in the soils appears in the humin and fulvic acid fractions.  相似文献   

3.
《Geoderma》2006,130(1-2):124-140
Chemically and physically fractionated samples extracted from the surface horizon of a soil developed under a mix of coniferous and deciduous vegetation in southwestern Colorado were studied. 13C NMR data on this soil's organic matter and its HF(aq)-washed residue, as well as the classic acid/base-separated humic fractions (humic acid, fulvic acid, humin), were examined for chemical–structural detail, e.g., the various structural functionalities present (especially lipids, carbohydrates, aromatics, polypeptides and carbonyl/carboxyls). Among the humic fractions, it was found that the lipid concentrations are in the order humic acid>fulvic acid= humin; for carbohydrates the order is fulvic acid>humin>humic acid; for aromatic carbons the order is humic acid>humin>fulvic acid; for polypeptides it is humic acid>fulvic acid>humin and for carbonyl/carboxyl species it is humin>humic acid>fulvic acid, but the differences are small. 13C spin–lattice relaxation times indicate that at least two types of “domains” exist in each, corresponding to “higher” and “lower” concentrations of paramagnetic centers, e.g., Fe3+.  相似文献   

4.
At Mt. Hirugatake in the Tanzawa Mountains, Kanto district, Japan, the deciduous broadleaved forests have rapidly declined. In our previous studies, we reported that the amount of soil organic matter had significantly decreased at the early and final stages of forest decline, and that the soil microbial biomass also showed a large decrease at these stages, suggesting that the composition of soil organic matter might have also changed with forest decline. To clarify the influences of forest decline on the composition of soil organic matter, the amount of humic substances, optical properties of humic acid, and the amount of soil carbohydrates in surface soils at different stages of forest decline were investigated. The amounts of humic acid and fulvic acid decreased to a lesser extent at the early and middle stages of forest decline, and showed a significant decrease at the final stage. As the amount of humin significantly decreased at the early stage, it was plausible that the distinct decrease in the total carbon content of the soil surface horizons at the early stage of forest decline was induced by the decrease in the amount of humin, and at the final stage, by the decrease in the amounts of humic acid and fulvic acid. The amount of soil carbohydrates did not change appreciably with forest decline although the soil organic matter content markedly decreased. It was suggested that most of the carbohydrates in the soil surface horizons were in a stabilized form consisting of complexes with humic substances, metals, and minerals, and would not be affected by the environmental changes associated with forest decline.  相似文献   

5.
Previous solution 13C n.m.r. studies of soil organic matter have been confined to isolated humic or fulvic acid fractions. A study of 10 crude alkaline extracts from five New Zealand topsoils has now shown that such purification is unnecessary. Spectra were not noticeably broadened by co-extracted iron in concentrations up to 2 mg cm?3. Optimized pulse parameters were similar to those reported for a solution of a purified humic acid. Relaxation results support a generalized model for humic material, in which aromatic structures, carbohydrates, amino acids and polymethylene chains are linked together to form flexible macromolecules. Relative contributions from each component varied from soil to soil.  相似文献   

6.
Incorporation of newly-immobilized N into major soil organic matter fractions during a cropping period under paddy and upland cropping systems in the tropics was investigated in Jawa paddy fields with and without fish cultivation and a Sumatra cassava field in Indonesia. 15N-labelled urea (15N urea) was applied as basal fertilizer, and the soil samples were collected after harvest. The percentage of distribution of the residual N in soil from 15N urea into the humic acids, fulvic acid fraction, and humin were 13.1–13.9, 19.0–20.5, and 53.4–54.3%, respectively, for the Jawa paddy soils, and 14.9, 27.4, and 52.4%, respectively, for the Sumatra cassava soil. These values were comparable to the reported ones for other climatic zones. The percentage of distribution of 15N urea-derived N into humic acids was larger than that of total N into the same fraction in all the soils. The distribution into the fulvic acid fraction was also larger for 15N urea-derived N than for total N in the Jawa soils. Humic and non-humic substances in the fulvic acid fraction were separated using insoluble polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) into the adsorbed and non-adsorbed fractions, respectively. Less than 5% of the 15N urea-derived N in fulvic acid fraction was detected in the PVP-adsorbed fraction (generic fulvic acids). The proportion of non-hydrolyzable N remained after boiling with 6 M HCl in the 15N urea-derived N was 9.4–13.5%, 17.3–26.7%, and 8.4–16.6% for the humic acids, generic fulvic acids, and humin, respectively. The significantly low resistance to acid hydrolysis suggested that the 15N urea-derived N was less stable than the total N in soil regardless of the fractions of humus.  相似文献   

7.
Water-ex tractable poly carboxy lie acids and alkali-extractable humic acids and fulvic acids, were isolated from agricultural top-soils of two soil associations. Samples from four soil series from each association were selected with drainage status varying from well-drained to very poorly-drained. The amounts of atkali-extractable humic acid and water-ex tractable polycarboxylic acids were highest in the very poorly-drained soils whilst the amounts of alkali-extractable fulvic acid were generally similar in all the soils, although the fulvic acid accounted for a lower proportion of the total organic matter in the poorly-drained soils. Oxalate-extractable aluminium decreased with increased drainage impedance, whilst no such trend was observed for oxalate-extractable iron. It is suggested that the fulvic acid-like polycarboxylic acids are removed from the soil solution by adsorption onto sesquioxides; so that the lower content of aluminium oxides in the very poorly-drained soils results in depressed levels of fulvic acid and increased concentrations of water-extractable polycarboxylic acids.  相似文献   

8.
Effects of acid pre-treatment and fractionation on the molecular weight distribution of OIM Na4P2O7 organic matter extracts were investigated in a chronosequence of weakly weathered soils developed on aeolian sand in New Zealand. Acid pre-treatment of soils with OIM HCl followed by OIM HCI:03M HF was found to enhance the polydispersion in the nominal molecular weights of the extracts. The same treatment resulted in significant increases in yield and reduction in ash content. However, prolonged standing of extracts in the acids led to acid-induced polymerization, resulting in a predominance of organic matter in the higher nominal molecular weight ranges. Fractionation of organic matter extracts by acid precipitation into humic and fulvic acids did not separate them according to molecular weight as commonly believed. Instead, fulvic acids from most soils were found to have similar nominal molecular weight distributions to those of their humic acid counterparts. A large proportion of soil fulvic acid compounds was in the > 100 000 nominal molecular weight range.  相似文献   

9.
We used NMR spectroscopy to characterize humid acids extracted from soils that had received long-term application of 2 levels of biosolids to evaluate the soil organic matter (SOM) stability in biosolids-amended soils. The study also quantified fulvic acids (FAs), humic acids (HAs) and Fe/Al oxides. The soils were collected in 2004 from 7 fields, in Fulton County, southwestern Illinois, which received biosolids at a cumulative rate of 0 (control), 554 (low biosolids) and 1,066 (high biosolids) Mg ha−1. The application of biosolids increased both FA and HA contents, but biosolids-amended soil and control soil did not differ in FA/HA ratio. Biosolids application had no effect on water-soluble organic carbon content. Biosolids application increased the presence of Fe/Al in the SOM complex and lowered its C/Fe and C/Al ratios. 13C NMR spectra showed increased alkyl C and decreased aromatic C content in soil HAs with the application of biosolids, and the extent of such changes was higher with high than low biosolids treatment. Under biosolids application, the soil HAs’ C structure shifts from O-alkyl-dominant to alkyl-dominant. Biosolids application does not decrease SOM stability but rather increases the stability of soil humic substances.  相似文献   

10.
The fractional composition of dissolved organic matter and the chemical nature of humic and fulvic acids were studied in lysimetric waters from forest soils of different altitudinal zones in the Sikhote Alin Range. The elemental composition, infrared absorption spectra, concentrations of acid functional groups, and pK spectra of humic and fulvic acids were determined. Fulvic acids predominated in the upper soil horizons, and fraction of nonspecific dissolved organic substances predominated in the lower mineral horizons. The portion of humic acids in the humus horizons markedly decreased from the low-mountain soils to the high-mountain soils; the nitrogen content of humic and fulvic acids decreased in the same direction. Three classes of carboxyl and phenolic groups were determined in pK-spectra of humic and fulvic acids. The soils of high-mountain zones had stronger acidic properties of humic and fulvic acids in comparison with the soils of low-mountain zones. The determined characteristics of the composition of dissolved organic matter and the trends of their changes contribute to our knowledge of pedogenetic processes in the altitudinal sequence of forest landscapes of the Sikhote Alin Range.  相似文献   

11.
In most literature on soil, the term humus has been used as synonymous with soil organic matter, on the other hand, it has been applied to a portion of soil organic matter that has decomposed and has lost the structure of the original matter, from which it has derived. Scheffer and Schachtschabel 1) defined the humus not synonymously with soil organic matter, but, in a broad sense, as all the dead organic substances which are accumulated on the soil surface as well as in the soil layer, and undergo continually decomposition, alteration, and synthetic reactions. According to them, the composition groups of humus are divided into non-humic and humic, and the latter group is sub-divided into (1) fulvic acid and humo-lignin acid, (2) humic acid, (3) humin, and (4) humus coal. Some natures of these composition groups of humus are shown in Table 1.  相似文献   

12.
The carbon-isotopic composition of fulvic and humic acid from the A horizons of eight soil types, developed under a wide variety of climatological conditions, was measured. The fulvic acid is always enriched in 13C as compared with the humic acid from the same soil by a rather constant factor of 0.9?. The fulvic acids are isotopically closer to the plant source of the organic matter and thus represent an intermediate stage in the formation of humic substances. Depth sections of peat soil showed that carbon isotopes can be used to evaluate the dynamic nature of the fulvic-acid fraction. With depth, a transfer of carbon groups from polysaccharides to fulvic acid is seen. Based on isotopic evidence it is shown that in addition to formation of β-humus, part of the fulvic acid is condensed with depth to a stable humic fraction — humin.  相似文献   

13.
Four samples of soil organic matter and their humic acids, fulvic acids and humin were studied with solid-state 13CP MAS NMR. The whole soil samples were fractionated using NaOH and HCl in order to extract humic acids, fulvic acids and humin. This investigation indicates that conventional humus fractionation does not significantly change the content of different functional groups in soil.  相似文献   

14.
Two arable soils and one pasture soil had previously been air-dried for 6 d and stored at room temperature. The enzyme activities remaining after this treatment were constant. The soils were then extracted with 140 mM sodium pyrophosphate at pH 7.1. Amino acid N and total organic C content of soils and soil extracts, together with humic and fulvic acids content of soil extracts were determined. Total organic C was determined in soil residues obtained after extraction. Chemical characterization of the organic matter of soils, soil extracts and soil residues was carried out by pyrolysis–gas chromatography (Py–GC). Protease activity was determined in soil extracts and soil residues by using three different substrates: N-benzoyl- -argininamide (BAA), specific for trypsin; N-benzyloxycarbonyl- -phenylalanyl -leucine (ZPL), specific for carboxypeptidases, and casein, essentially non-specific. Comparative studies between specific activities referred to organic C in soils, soil extracts and soil residues and their corresponding pyrogram composition, and also between total extracted or residual activity and the humine or unhumified organic matter content of the corresponding soil, allowed us to establish hypotheses about the type of organic matter the enzymes are associated with. From 12% to 21% of the soil organic C (33% to 39% of which were humic acids) and from 3% and 18% of amino acid N were extracted from soil using pyrophosphate. Py–GC analyses showed that pyrophosphate was effective in extracting condensed humic substances and glycoproteins and that the organic matter present in soil extracts was especially rich in intact or partially-decomposed fresh residues of carbohydrate origin and also in certain humus-associated proteins. Extracted BAA-hydrolysing activity accounted for 11% to 36% of the soil activity, depending on soil type. Extracted ZPL- and casein-hydrolysing activities were, with one exception, remarkably high, accounting for about 100% or even more of the soil activity, depending on soil type. According to the results BAA-hydrolysing proteases are probably mostly associated with highly condensed humus, ZPL-hydrolysing proteases with less condensed humic substances and casein-hydrolysing proteases with fresh organic matter.  相似文献   

15.
Decomposition and humification were studied within three types of forest humus (mull, moder, and mor) by means of CPMAS 13C NMR spectroscopy combined with degradative methods. The NMR data show that O-alkyl carbon decreases in all soils, and alkyl as well as carboxyl carbon increase as depth and decomposition increase; the percentage of aromatic carbon remains constant at about 25%. With increasing depth the amount of carbon that can be identified as belonging to specific compound classes by wet chemical methods decreases from 60% to 40%. Microbial polysaccharides and the proportion of non polysaccharide O-alkyl carbon increase with depth. A selective preservation of recalcitrant, condensed lignin structural units is also observed. In order to relate the spectroscopic and chemical data from investigations of whole soils with studies of humification, samples were fractionated into fulvic acid, humic acid, and humin fractions. The fulvic acid fraction contains large concentrations of carbohydrates irrespective of the soil horizon. The humic acid fraction contains less polysaccharides, but high amounts of alkyl carbon and aromatic structures. The percentage of aromatic carbon existing in the humic acid fraction increases with depth, probably reflecting the amount and degree of oxidative decomposition of lignin. A loss of methoxyl and phenolic groups is evident in the 13C NMR spectra of the humic acid fraction. The humin fraction resembles relatively unchanged plant-derived materials as evident from the lignin parameters and carbohydrate contents. All the observed data seem to indicate that humic acids originate form oxidative degradation of humin or plant litter.  相似文献   

16.
We studied the acid‐base properties of 16 fulvic acids and 16 humic acids isolated from the surface (3–15 cm) and subsurface (> 45 cm) horizons of two types of acid forest soils, derived respectively from amphibolite and granite rocks, under five different types of vegetation. The observed differences between the contents of humic substances in the two types of soils were related to the degree of Al‐saturation of the soil organic matter, as indicated by the molar ratio between pyrophosphate extractable Al and C. Humic fractions were characterized in terms of elemental composition, and CPMAS 13C NMR spectrometry. The contents of carboxylic and phenolic groups were estimated by potentiometric titrations conducted in 0.1 m KNO3 in a nitrogen atmosphere. The fulvic acids contained more carboxylic groups but less phenolic groups than the humic acids: the ratio of phenolic to carboxylic groups in the humic acids was 0.48 ± 0.10 and in the fulvic acids 0.23 ± 0.05. The mean values of the protonation constants of each of the humic substance fractions can be used as generic parameters for describing the proton binding properties. The fulvic acids isolated from the subsurface horizon of the soil contained between 2.6 and 23% more carboxylic groups, and the humic acids between 8 and 43% more carboxylic groups than those isolated from the surface horizon of the same soil.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract

Knowledge of the distribution of soil organic matter (SOM) fractions is important in managing soils toward a sustainable agricultural system in a tropical environment. However, data on Histosols is limited. This study developed 19 profiles of Histosols and soils with high organic-matter content from different regions of Brazil. Soil organic matter was fractionated into fulvic acids (FAF), humic acids (HAF), and humin (HUM). The ratios HAF/FAF and AE (alkaline extract)/HUM were calculated. The objectives were to evaluate the method for SOM fractionating in Histosols and related soils and to correlate the distribution of organic fractions with other soil attributes. The humic fractions presented significant correlations with other soil attributes, the best being the correlation between FAF and nutrient level. The HAF and HUM presented high correlation with cationic exchange capacity, active acidity (H+) and pH. Humin and the alkaline extract absorbance measured at 380 nm and 465 nm and presented good correlation with total organic carbon.  相似文献   

18.
ABSTRACT

Sugarcane is a strategic commodity in Indonesia. It is usually raised in a monoculture system. There is a lack of information about the effects of extended sugarcane monoculture on the soil carbon fraction. The aim of this study was to determine the relative changes in the soil organic C fractions in response to the duration of sugarcane monoculture on Entisols, Inceptisols, and Vertisols. The measured variables were the percentages of sand, silt, and clay, organic matter (OM), total nitrogen (TN), pH (H2O), cation exchange capacity (CEC), NH4 +, NO3 -, labile carbon fraction (soil carbon mineralization (C-Min), soil microbial carbon (C-Mic), and carbon particulate organic matter (C-POM)), and stable carbon fraction (humic and fulvic acids). Soil type with sugarcane monoculture period had significant influences on the percentages of clay, sand, silt, CEC, and pH (H2O). Soil type and sugarcane monoculture period had no apparent significant effect on C-Min or C-POM but did significantly influence C-Mic. The humic and fulvic acid levels in all three soil types were affected by the duration of sugarcane monoculture. To establish the impact of long-term sugarcane monoculture on the physicochemical properties of soils with various textures, it is more appropriate to measure the soil stable carbon fractions such as humic and fulvic acid rather than the soil labile carbon fractions such as C-Min, C-POM, or C-Mic.  相似文献   

19.
Samples of three organic‐rich soils (ombrotrophic peat, podzol H‐horizon, humic ranker) were extensively washed with dilute nitric acid, dialysed against deionised water, and then subjected to acid‐base titrations over the pH range 3–10, in 0.3–300 mm NaNO3, and with soil concentrations in the range 2–150 g l?1. The results for the three soils were quantitatively similar. Comparison of the titration data with previously published results for humic acids isolated from the same soils showed the soil organic matter to have a greater ionic strength dependency of proton binding and to possess relatively greater buffering capacity at high pH, attributable to weak acid groups (c. 2–5 mmol g–1) in the humin fraction of the soils. To describe the soil titration data quantitatively, we modified Humic Ion‐Binding Model VI‐FD, which utilizes a fixed Donnan volume to describe counterion accumulation, by increasing the content of weak acid groups. When artefacts in pH measurement caused by the suspension effect were taken into account, the resulting Model VI‐FD2 provided good or fair simulations of all the titration data. The results suggest that soil structure, specifically aggregation, plays a significant role in cation binding by organic soils in situ. The lack of dependence of the titration results on soil suspension concentration suggests that the findings can be applied to soils in situ.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract

The effects of different management systems on the level and composition of humified organic matter in an entic Haplustoll from the semiarid Pampean region were studied. The systems were: TPc, wheat‐mixed pasture; TV, wheat (Triticum aestivum), oat (Avena sativa), corn (Zea mays) and triticale grasses; TP, wheat‐cattle grazing; and V, virgin, non cultivated. Humic acids were extracted, fractionated, and analyzed for their organic carbon (OC) content, elemental composition, and E4:E6 spectral ratios. The infrared (IR), electron spin resonance (ESR). and 13C‐NMR spectra were registered on these humic acids. The TP rotation showed the lowest humic acid‐carbon to fulvic acid‐carbon (HA‐C:FA‐C) ratio. The lower O:C ratio of humic acids from the cropped soils indicates a higher level of oxidation than that of the virgin one. The comparison of the different methodologies allowed us to conclude that crop rotations and conservation tillage were adequate to mantain the level and composition of the soil organic matter and humus which affected the soil fertility and level of productivity  相似文献   

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