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Effect of natural organic soil solutes on weathering rates of soil minerals
Author(s) -
RAULUNDRASMUSSEN K.,
BORGGAARD O. K.,
HANSEN H. C. B.,
OLSSON M.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
european journal of soil science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.244
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1365-2389
pISSN - 1351-0754
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2389.1998.4930397.x
Subject(s) - weathering , natural (archaeology) , soil production function , environmental chemistry , soil science , clay minerals , environmental science , geology , chemistry , geochemistry , earth science , soil water , pedogenesis , paleontology
Summary The rate at which minerals in the soil weather is affected by pH and concentration of organic solutes (DOC). The rates of release of Al, Ca, Fe, K, Mg, Na, P and Si from a mineral soil sample to solutions of natural organic solutes and HCI (control) were determined at pH 3 and 4 for up to 17 weeks. Soil solutions were collected by centrifuging materials of O horizons from various soil types under four tree species (spruce, birch, oak, beech) and passed through a cation‐exchange resin to yield H + ‐saturated organic solutes. The acceleration of the elements' release by the organic solutes was shown directly by the relative ligand effect (RLE), that is, the release rate in the organic solute solution divided by the release rate in the HCI solution (control) at the same pH. The RLE was greater at pH 4 than at pH 3, and it decreased for the elements in the order Fe > Ca > Mg > Al ≈ Si > K ≈ Na. This indicates that natural organic solutes are more important weathering agents at higher than lower pH and for weathering of mafic minerals rich in Ca, Fe and Mg than of felsic minerals such as K‐ and Na‐feldspars. For all elements and at both pHs, RLE was strongly correlated with the concentration of DOC, which was also closely correlated with titratable acidity of the organic solutes. The important effect of soil type and tree species in producing weathering‐promoting organic solutes therefore seems to be expressed through the concentration and not the composition of the organic soil solutes.

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