Spatial organization of soil microaggregates

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • Eva Lehndorff
  • Andrei Rodionov
  • Lutz Plümer
  • Peter Rottmann
  • Beate Spiering
  • Stefan Dultz
  • Wulf Amelung

Externe Organisationen

  • Universität Bayreuth
  • Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
  • Southwest Jiaotong University
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Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer114915
FachzeitschriftGeoderma
Jahrgang386
Frühes Online-Datum9 Jan. 2021
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 15 März 2021

Abstract

The physical arrangement of compounds in soil microaggregates is controlling many ecosystem functions such as soil stability and C sequestration. However, little is known about the spatial arrangement of organic and inorganic compounds in soil microaggregates, due to the lack of in-situ analyses of undisturbed material. We hypothesized that microaggregates are spatially organized due to interactions between organic matter and mineral phases. To test this, we separated the water stable, occluded, large and small microaggregate fractions (250–53 and 53–20 µm, 60 J ml−1 dispersion energy) from Ap horizons of a toposequence of sandy to loamy Luvisols (Germany) with increasing clay contents (19 to 35% clay), and subjected in total 60 individual aggregates to elemental mapping by electron probe micro analysis (EPMA), which recorded C, N, P, Al, Fe, Ca, K, Cl, and Si contents at 1 × 1 µm resolution. Stoichiometric element ratios characteristic for organic and inorganic matter were used to define discrete components of the aggregates and analyze their spatial arrangement. We found a pronounced heterogeneity in content and arrangement of discrete aggregate components, which was not reproducible for different specimens from the same soil microaggregate fraction, and thus largely independent of clay content in soil. However, nearest neighbor analyses revealed close spatial correlations between plant detritus (C:N app. 100:10) and microbial organic matter (C:N app. 10:1) indicating a spatial relationship between source and consumer. There was no systematic relationship between soil minerals and organic matter, suggesting that well-established macroscale correlations between contents of pedogenic oxides and clay minerals with soil organic matter storage do not apply to soil microaggregates.

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Spatial organization of soil microaggregates. / Lehndorff, Eva; Rodionov, Andrei; Plümer, Lutz et al.
in: Geoderma, Jahrgang 386, 114915, 15.03.2021.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Lehndorff, E, Rodionov, A, Plümer, L, Rottmann, P, Spiering, B, Dultz, S & Amelung, W 2021, 'Spatial organization of soil microaggregates', Geoderma, Jg. 386, 114915. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2020.114915
Lehndorff, E., Rodionov, A., Plümer, L., Rottmann, P., Spiering, B., Dultz, S., & Amelung, W. (2021). Spatial organization of soil microaggregates. Geoderma, 386, Artikel 114915. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2020.114915
Lehndorff E, Rodionov A, Plümer L, Rottmann P, Spiering B, Dultz S et al. Spatial organization of soil microaggregates. Geoderma. 2021 Mär 15;386:114915. Epub 2021 Jan 9. doi: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2020.114915
Lehndorff, Eva ; Rodionov, Andrei ; Plümer, Lutz et al. / Spatial organization of soil microaggregates. in: Geoderma. 2021 ; Jahrgang 386.
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abstract = "The physical arrangement of compounds in soil microaggregates is controlling many ecosystem functions such as soil stability and C sequestration. However, little is known about the spatial arrangement of organic and inorganic compounds in soil microaggregates, due to the lack of in-situ analyses of undisturbed material. We hypothesized that microaggregates are spatially organized due to interactions between organic matter and mineral phases. To test this, we separated the water stable, occluded, large and small microaggregate fractions (250–53 and 53–20 µm, 60 J ml−1 dispersion energy) from Ap horizons of a toposequence of sandy to loamy Luvisols (Germany) with increasing clay contents (19 to 35% clay), and subjected in total 60 individual aggregates to elemental mapping by electron probe micro analysis (EPMA), which recorded C, N, P, Al, Fe, Ca, K, Cl, and Si contents at 1 × 1 µm resolution. Stoichiometric element ratios characteristic for organic and inorganic matter were used to define discrete components of the aggregates and analyze their spatial arrangement. We found a pronounced heterogeneity in content and arrangement of discrete aggregate components, which was not reproducible for different specimens from the same soil microaggregate fraction, and thus largely independent of clay content in soil. However, nearest neighbor analyses revealed close spatial correlations between plant detritus (C:N app. 100:10) and microbial organic matter (C:N app. 10:1) indicating a spatial relationship between source and consumer. There was no systematic relationship between soil minerals and organic matter, suggesting that well-established macroscale correlations between contents of pedogenic oxides and clay minerals with soil organic matter storage do not apply to soil microaggregates.",
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note = "Funding Information: This work is associated to the MAD Soil project (MADSoil – Microaggregates: Formation and turnover of the structural building blocks of soils), funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft ( DFG Research Unit 2179). We very much appreciated the comments by two anonymous reviewers, the journal editor Y. Capowiez and S. Crowhurst for language editing.",
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T1 - Spatial organization of soil microaggregates

AU - Lehndorff, Eva

AU - Rodionov, Andrei

AU - Plümer, Lutz

AU - Rottmann, Peter

AU - Spiering, Beate

AU - Dultz, Stefan

AU - Amelung, Wulf

N1 - Funding Information: This work is associated to the MAD Soil project (MADSoil – Microaggregates: Formation and turnover of the structural building blocks of soils), funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft ( DFG Research Unit 2179). We very much appreciated the comments by two anonymous reviewers, the journal editor Y. Capowiez and S. Crowhurst for language editing.

PY - 2021/3/15

Y1 - 2021/3/15

N2 - The physical arrangement of compounds in soil microaggregates is controlling many ecosystem functions such as soil stability and C sequestration. However, little is known about the spatial arrangement of organic and inorganic compounds in soil microaggregates, due to the lack of in-situ analyses of undisturbed material. We hypothesized that microaggregates are spatially organized due to interactions between organic matter and mineral phases. To test this, we separated the water stable, occluded, large and small microaggregate fractions (250–53 and 53–20 µm, 60 J ml−1 dispersion energy) from Ap horizons of a toposequence of sandy to loamy Luvisols (Germany) with increasing clay contents (19 to 35% clay), and subjected in total 60 individual aggregates to elemental mapping by electron probe micro analysis (EPMA), which recorded C, N, P, Al, Fe, Ca, K, Cl, and Si contents at 1 × 1 µm resolution. Stoichiometric element ratios characteristic for organic and inorganic matter were used to define discrete components of the aggregates and analyze their spatial arrangement. We found a pronounced heterogeneity in content and arrangement of discrete aggregate components, which was not reproducible for different specimens from the same soil microaggregate fraction, and thus largely independent of clay content in soil. However, nearest neighbor analyses revealed close spatial correlations between plant detritus (C:N app. 100:10) and microbial organic matter (C:N app. 10:1) indicating a spatial relationship between source and consumer. There was no systematic relationship between soil minerals and organic matter, suggesting that well-established macroscale correlations between contents of pedogenic oxides and clay minerals with soil organic matter storage do not apply to soil microaggregates.

AB - The physical arrangement of compounds in soil microaggregates is controlling many ecosystem functions such as soil stability and C sequestration. However, little is known about the spatial arrangement of organic and inorganic compounds in soil microaggregates, due to the lack of in-situ analyses of undisturbed material. We hypothesized that microaggregates are spatially organized due to interactions between organic matter and mineral phases. To test this, we separated the water stable, occluded, large and small microaggregate fractions (250–53 and 53–20 µm, 60 J ml−1 dispersion energy) from Ap horizons of a toposequence of sandy to loamy Luvisols (Germany) with increasing clay contents (19 to 35% clay), and subjected in total 60 individual aggregates to elemental mapping by electron probe micro analysis (EPMA), which recorded C, N, P, Al, Fe, Ca, K, Cl, and Si contents at 1 × 1 µm resolution. Stoichiometric element ratios characteristic for organic and inorganic matter were used to define discrete components of the aggregates and analyze their spatial arrangement. We found a pronounced heterogeneity in content and arrangement of discrete aggregate components, which was not reproducible for different specimens from the same soil microaggregate fraction, and thus largely independent of clay content in soil. However, nearest neighbor analyses revealed close spatial correlations between plant detritus (C:N app. 100:10) and microbial organic matter (C:N app. 10:1) indicating a spatial relationship between source and consumer. There was no systematic relationship between soil minerals and organic matter, suggesting that well-established macroscale correlations between contents of pedogenic oxides and clay minerals with soil organic matter storage do not apply to soil microaggregates.

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