Agronomy (Oct 2019)

Differences in Mineral Phase Associated Soil Organic Matter Composition due to Varying Tillage Intensity

  • Gergely Jakab,
  • Tibor Filep,
  • Csilla Király,
  • Balázs Madarász,
  • Dóra Zacháry,
  • Marianna Ringer,
  • Anna Vancsik,
  • Lilla Gáspár,
  • Zoltán Szalai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy9110700
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. 700

Abstract

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The volume of soil organic matter (SOM) changes, owing to variations in tillage systems. Conservation tillage (CT) is a useful method for recovering the SOM content of crop fields. However, little is known about the SOM composition of silt- and clay-associated and aggregate-occluded organic matter (OM). The present study aimed at determining the SOM compositions of various SOM fractions in the same Luvisol in a native forest and under ploughing and CT. SOM fractions (silt and clay associated; sand and aggregates associated; restricted OM) were characterized using diffuse reflectance Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. The size of both the aggregate-occluded and resistant SOM pools increased, owing to the shift in the tillage system to CT for 15 years. As a general trend, the soil organic carbon content was inversely proportional to aromaticity under both crop fields, which supported the preferential mineralization of aliphatic components in each fraction. The shift in the tillage system could trigger rapid qualitative changes even in the stable restricted carbon pools; nevertheless, it was difficult to distinguish between the role of OM and the mineral composition in the FTIR spectra. In particular, the clay-related organic-mineral complexes could trigger difficulties in the traditional interpretation methods.

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