Soil Organic Matter Composition Impacts its Degradability and Association with Soil Minerals
Soil organic matter (OM) is a complex mixture of compounds, mainly derived from plants and microbes at various states of decay. It is part of the global carbon cycle and is important for maintaining soil quality. OM protection is mainly attributed to its association with minerals. However, clay m...
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ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-339662013-04-19T19:58:21ZSoil Organic Matter Composition Impacts its Degradability and Association with Soil MineralsClemente, Joyce S.Soil organic matterligninparticle size fractionsdensity fractionshumic substancesCuO oxidationlipidsnuclear magnetic resonancemass spectrometrygrassland soilmicrobial-derived peptidesclay-size fractionlight density fractionmicrobial-derived organic matterplant-derived organic mattersolid-state 13C NMRsolution-state 1H NMRclaymontmorillonitesodium chloritesorptionmaize transformationlignin phenolsgas chromatography/mass spectrometryZea mayscorn042507490996Soil organic matter (OM) is a complex mixture of compounds, mainly derived from plants and microbes at various states of decay. It is part of the global carbon cycle and is important for maintaining soil quality. OM protection is mainly attributed to its association with minerals. However, clay minerals preferentially sorb specific OM structures, and clay sorption sites become saturated as OM concentrations increase. Therefore, it is important to examine how OM structures influence their association with soil minerals, and to characterize other protection mechanisms. Several techniques, which provide complementary information, were combined to investigate OM composition: Biomarker (lignin phenol, cutin-OH acid, and lipid) analysis, using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry; solid-state 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy; and an emerging method, solution-state 1H NMR spectroscopy. OM composition of sand-, silt-, clay-size, and light fractions of Canadian soils were compared. It was found that microbial-derived and aliphatic structures accumulated in clay-size fractions, and lignin phenols in silt-size fractions may be protected from further oxidation. Therefore, OM protection through association with minerals may be structure-specific. OM in soils amended with maize leaves, stems, and roots from a biodegradation study were also examined. Over time, lignin phenol composition, and oxidation; and aliphatic structure contribution changed less in soils amended with leaves compared to soils amended with stems and roots. Compared to soils amended with leaves and stems, amendment with roots may have promoted the more efficient formation of microbial-derived OM. Therefore, plant chemistry influenced soil OM turnover. Synthetic OM-clay complexes and soil mineral fractions were used to investigate lignin protection from chemical oxidation. Coating with dodecanoic acid protected lignin from chemical oxidation, and overlying vegetation determined the relative resistance of lignin phenols in clay-size fractions from chemical oxidation. Therefore, additional protection from chemical oxidation may be attributed to OM composition and interactions between OM structures sorbed to clay minerals. Overall, these studies suggest that while association with minerals is important, OM turnover is also influenced by vegetation, and protection through association with clay minerals was modified by OM structure composition. As well, OM-OM interaction is a potential mechanism that protects soil OM from degradation.Simpson, Myrna J.2012-112012-12-11T15:13:10ZNO_RESTRICTION2012-12-11T15:13:10Z2012-12-11Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/33966en_ca |
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en_ca |
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topic |
Soil organic matter lignin particle size fractions density fractions humic substances CuO oxidation lipids nuclear magnetic resonance mass spectrometry grassland soil microbial-derived peptides clay-size fraction light density fraction microbial-derived organic matter plant-derived organic matter solid-state 13C NMR solution-state 1H NMR clay montmorillonite sodium chlorite sorption maize transformation lignin phenols gas chromatography/mass spectrometry Zea mays corn 0425 0749 0996 |
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Soil organic matter lignin particle size fractions density fractions humic substances CuO oxidation lipids nuclear magnetic resonance mass spectrometry grassland soil microbial-derived peptides clay-size fraction light density fraction microbial-derived organic matter plant-derived organic matter solid-state 13C NMR solution-state 1H NMR clay montmorillonite sodium chlorite sorption maize transformation lignin phenols gas chromatography/mass spectrometry Zea mays corn 0425 0749 0996 Clemente, Joyce S. Soil Organic Matter Composition Impacts its Degradability and Association with Soil Minerals |
description |
Soil organic matter (OM) is a complex mixture of compounds, mainly derived from plants and microbes at various states of decay. It is part of the global carbon cycle and is important for maintaining soil quality. OM protection is mainly attributed to its association with minerals. However, clay minerals preferentially sorb specific OM structures, and clay sorption sites become saturated as OM concentrations increase. Therefore, it is important to examine how OM structures influence their association with soil minerals, and to characterize other protection mechanisms. Several techniques, which provide complementary information, were combined to investigate OM composition: Biomarker (lignin phenol, cutin-OH acid, and lipid) analysis, using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry; solid-state 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy; and an emerging method, solution-state 1H NMR spectroscopy. OM composition of sand-, silt-, clay-size, and light fractions of Canadian soils were compared. It was found that microbial-derived and aliphatic structures accumulated in clay-size fractions, and lignin phenols in silt-size fractions may be protected from further oxidation. Therefore, OM protection through association with minerals may be structure-specific. OM in soils amended with maize leaves, stems, and roots from a biodegradation study were also examined. Over time, lignin phenol composition, and oxidation; and aliphatic structure contribution changed less in soils amended with leaves compared to soils amended with stems and roots. Compared to soils amended with leaves and stems, amendment with roots may have promoted the more efficient formation of microbial-derived OM. Therefore, plant chemistry influenced soil OM turnover. Synthetic OM-clay complexes and soil mineral fractions were used to investigate lignin protection from chemical oxidation. Coating with dodecanoic acid protected lignin from chemical oxidation, and overlying vegetation determined the relative resistance of lignin phenols in clay-size fractions from chemical oxidation. Therefore, additional protection from chemical oxidation may be attributed to OM composition and interactions between OM structures sorbed to clay minerals. Overall, these studies suggest that while association with minerals is important, OM turnover is also influenced by vegetation, and protection through association with clay minerals was modified by OM structure composition. As well, OM-OM interaction is a potential mechanism that protects soil OM from degradation. |
author2 |
Simpson, Myrna J. |
author_facet |
Simpson, Myrna J. Clemente, Joyce S. |
author |
Clemente, Joyce S. |
author_sort |
Clemente, Joyce S. |
title |
Soil Organic Matter Composition Impacts its Degradability and Association with Soil Minerals |
title_short |
Soil Organic Matter Composition Impacts its Degradability and Association with Soil Minerals |
title_full |
Soil Organic Matter Composition Impacts its Degradability and Association with Soil Minerals |
title_fullStr |
Soil Organic Matter Composition Impacts its Degradability and Association with Soil Minerals |
title_full_unstemmed |
Soil Organic Matter Composition Impacts its Degradability and Association with Soil Minerals |
title_sort |
soil organic matter composition impacts its degradability and association with soil minerals |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1807/33966 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT clementejoyces soilorganicmattercompositionimpactsitsdegradabilityandassociationwithsoilminerals |
_version_ |
1716582253312606208 |