The problem of soil interpretation according to the WRB 2014 classification system in the context of anthropogenic transformations |
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Authors: | Jonas Volungevicius Laurynas Jukna Darijus Veteikis Rimantas Vaisvalavicius Kristina Amaleviciute Alvyra Slepetiene |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Geography and Land management, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Vilnius University, Vilnius, Lithuaniajonas.volungevicius@gmail.com;3. Department of Geography and Land management, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Vilnius University, Vilnius, Lithuania;4. Faculty of Agronomy, Institute of Agroecosystems and Soil Science, Aleksandras Stulginskis University, Akademija, Lithuania;5. Chemical Research Laboratory, Institute of Agriculture, Lithuanian Research Centre for Agriculture and Forestry, K?dainiai, Lithuania |
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Abstract: | Evaluation of soil transformations and degradation is important not only for agriculture, but also for fundamental research on identification of new features for classification. In 1999, new Lithuanian soil classification (LTDK-99) was developed by adopting the diagnostic principles of WRB 1998. Together with new knowledge, it highlighted some relevant soil research and classification problems. Not only new terms but also diagnostic features of several newly distinguished first-level soils groups are being discussed, especially for the identification of cambisols, planosols, arenosols, and regosols. Additionally, a group of stagnosols is suggested for inclusion into this classification. The presence of glaciogenic secondary clay minerals in Lithuanian cambisols does not imply unambiguous brownification involvement, neither any study shows cambisols having specific to brownification iron minerals. The intensively occurring lesive in these soils questions correctness of identification of cambisols additionally aggravated by strong and deep anthropogenization of the soil profiles within the territorial range. Complex glaciogenesis makes it difficult to identify Lithuanian planosols. WRB 2014 (update 2015) identifies planosols according to the pedogenesis in old, strongly weathered binomial deposits using examples mostly from South American, South and East African plateaus of the subtropical zone. The same classification assigns planosols identified in Lithuania to stagnosols, that is, to the soils characterized by binomial genesis and stagnification. The diagnostic features of arenosols and regosols are similar in both groups and are related to primitive pedogenesis. Difficulties in distinguishing between the two groups in Lithuania are strengthened by the intensive cultivation of the ecosystems in their territorial range. The existing problems in Lithuanian soil diagnostics underline the questions of soil classification in general, especially regarding the evolution tendencies in soil classification. The article draws attention to the soil diagnostic aspects like distribution and genesis of clay particles, genesis of territory, and anthropogenic transformation for the improvement of soil identification. |
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Keywords: | Agroecosystem anthropogenic transformation arenosols cambisols planosols regosols soil classification soils of Lithuania stagnosols |
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