Composition and mean residence time of molecular weight fractions of organic matter extracted from two soils under different forest species
Authors: Giacomo Certini; Alberto Agnelli; Giuseppe Corti; Antonella Capperucci
Source: Biogeochemistry, Volume 71, Number 3, December 2004 , pp. 299-316(18)
Publisher: Springer
Abstract:
The organic matter extracted from various mineral horizons of two forest soils, one under silver fir (Abies alba Mill.), the other under European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.), was fractionated by dialysis into three fractions, 1001000, 10008000, and >8000 Da. On a C basis, in all horizons the recovered organic matter amounted to less than a half of the total and was mainly composed of molecules >8000 Da. The 1001000 Da fraction had a principal elemental composition profoundly different from the other two fractions, which, instead differed from each other significantly only for the S content and the molar ratio of C with N. No significant difference in this regard was found between soils. The richness in O and some typical absorption bands in the FT-IR spectra indicated that the 1001000 Da fraction had a lot of carboxyl moieties. The spectroscopic (13C NMR) investigation showed that the 10008000 and >8000 Da fractions had a prevalently aliphatic nature and signals attributable to polysaccharides (O-alkyl C) revealed overall a high presence of non-humic biopolymers. These latter were significantly more abundant, suggesting a lower degree of humification, in the >8000 Da fraction than in the 10008000 Da fraction. Comparing soils, that under beech appeared significantly richer in O-alkyl C than that under fir. The organics extracted from the A horizon of both soils had positive
14C values, indicating recent synthesis mainly due to the present forest cover. The mean residence time (MRT) of the combined 1001000 Da and 10008000 Da fractions and the >8000 Da fraction increased with depth, even to about 5000 years in the more than 1-m deep BC horizons under beech. In some cases, and especially in the soil under fir, despite higher values of
13C denoting stronger microbial decomposition, the 1008000 Da fraction showed a higher MRT than that of the >8000 Da fraction, perhaps due to its ascertained lower content of non-humic biopolymers.
Keywords: 13C NMR; C isotopes; Forest soils; Mean residence time (MRT); Soil organic matter (SOM)
Document Type: Research article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/B:BIOG.0000049345.11312.03
Affiliations: 1: Dipartimento di Scienza del Suolo e Nutrizione della Pianta, Università di Firenze, P.le delle Cascine 28, 50144 Firenze, Italy (( certini@unifi.it;, Fax: +39-55-333-273)), Email: certini@unifi.it
Publication date: 2004-12-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Anatomy & Physiology , Biology , Geology
- By this author: Giacomo Certini ; Alberto Agnelli ; Giuseppe Corti ; Antonella Capperucci

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