Impact of pine plantations on the form and mobility of nitrogen in soils of the eastern escarpment region of South Africa

Bibliography: leaves 96-101. === Recent research in the eastern escarpment area of South Africa has documented enhanced NO₃- concentrations in soil solution and stream water resulting from afforestation. There has been much research in the Northern Hemisphere regarding the qualitative and quantitati...

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Main Author: Echeverría, Marietta Elena
Other Authors: Willis, James
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/7680
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-76802020-10-06T05:11:03Z Impact of pine plantations on the form and mobility of nitrogen in soils of the eastern escarpment region of South Africa Echeverría, Marietta Elena Willis, James Fey, Martin V Environmental Geochemistry Bibliography: leaves 96-101. Recent research in the eastern escarpment area of South Africa has documented enhanced NO₃- concentrations in soil solution and stream water resulting from afforestation. There has been much research in the Northern Hemisphere regarding the qualitative and quantitative causes and consequences of N saturation in forest ecosystems. In order to assess the significance of local observations of afforestation-induced NO₃- enhancement in a global context, a study was conducted to evaluate the influence of forest plantations (Pinus spp.) on N form and mobility in soils in the eastern escarpment area of South Africa. Twenty soil samples were taken, half in grassland and half in forest, in the Graskop and Kaapsehoop areas of the eastern escarpment. Forest samples were taken as composites of approximately five individual samples in each stand from the top 20-25 em of soil, combining partially decomposed organic litter layer with the subjacent upper mineral soil horizon. Grassland samples were taken, again as composites, consisting of the upper mineral soil horizon (an organic litter layer was for the most part absent). Approximately three-quarters of each sample was air-dried, and crushed to pass through a 2-mm sieve and stored for analysis. The remaining quarter of each sample was passed through a 2-mm sieve and refrigerated at about 4°C in order to maintain field-moist conditions and to inhibit microbial transfornlations. Refrigerated samples were used for KCI-extractable NO₃- and NH₄+ analyses and N mineralisation experiments. The remaining analyses were performed on the air-dried samples. This study included two facets: physical and chemical characterisation of soil samples; and a series of laboratory experiments. The solid phase of the soils was analysed for organic carbon, total nitrogen and particle size distribution. The soil solution was investigated by making saturated paste extracts which were analysed for major ions, trace elements, electrical conductivity (EC) and pH. Extractable base cations, acidity and inorganic nitrogen (NH₄+ and NO₃-) were also analysed after extraction with NH₄OAc or KCl solutions. The laboratory experiments, intended to investigate the apparent differences in soil N transformations and mobility resulting from vegetation, consisted of both aerobic and anaerobic incubation to assess N mineralisation, a NO₃- sorption experiment and a soil to extract ratio dilution experiment. 2014-09-25T08:47:33Z 2014-09-25T08:47:33Z 2000 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/7680 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Geological Sciences
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Environmental Geochemistry
spellingShingle Environmental Geochemistry
Echeverría, Marietta Elena
Impact of pine plantations on the form and mobility of nitrogen in soils of the eastern escarpment region of South Africa
description Bibliography: leaves 96-101. === Recent research in the eastern escarpment area of South Africa has documented enhanced NO₃- concentrations in soil solution and stream water resulting from afforestation. There has been much research in the Northern Hemisphere regarding the qualitative and quantitative causes and consequences of N saturation in forest ecosystems. In order to assess the significance of local observations of afforestation-induced NO₃- enhancement in a global context, a study was conducted to evaluate the influence of forest plantations (Pinus spp.) on N form and mobility in soils in the eastern escarpment area of South Africa. Twenty soil samples were taken, half in grassland and half in forest, in the Graskop and Kaapsehoop areas of the eastern escarpment. Forest samples were taken as composites of approximately five individual samples in each stand from the top 20-25 em of soil, combining partially decomposed organic litter layer with the subjacent upper mineral soil horizon. Grassland samples were taken, again as composites, consisting of the upper mineral soil horizon (an organic litter layer was for the most part absent). Approximately three-quarters of each sample was air-dried, and crushed to pass through a 2-mm sieve and stored for analysis. The remaining quarter of each sample was passed through a 2-mm sieve and refrigerated at about 4°C in order to maintain field-moist conditions and to inhibit microbial transfornlations. Refrigerated samples were used for KCI-extractable NO₃- and NH₄+ analyses and N mineralisation experiments. The remaining analyses were performed on the air-dried samples. This study included two facets: physical and chemical characterisation of soil samples; and a series of laboratory experiments. The solid phase of the soils was analysed for organic carbon, total nitrogen and particle size distribution. The soil solution was investigated by making saturated paste extracts which were analysed for major ions, trace elements, electrical conductivity (EC) and pH. Extractable base cations, acidity and inorganic nitrogen (NH₄+ and NO₃-) were also analysed after extraction with NH₄OAc or KCl solutions. The laboratory experiments, intended to investigate the apparent differences in soil N transformations and mobility resulting from vegetation, consisted of both aerobic and anaerobic incubation to assess N mineralisation, a NO₃- sorption experiment and a soil to extract ratio dilution experiment.
author2 Willis, James
author_facet Willis, James
Echeverría, Marietta Elena
author Echeverría, Marietta Elena
author_sort Echeverría, Marietta Elena
title Impact of pine plantations on the form and mobility of nitrogen in soils of the eastern escarpment region of South Africa
title_short Impact of pine plantations on the form and mobility of nitrogen in soils of the eastern escarpment region of South Africa
title_full Impact of pine plantations on the form and mobility of nitrogen in soils of the eastern escarpment region of South Africa
title_fullStr Impact of pine plantations on the form and mobility of nitrogen in soils of the eastern escarpment region of South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Impact of pine plantations on the form and mobility of nitrogen in soils of the eastern escarpment region of South Africa
title_sort impact of pine plantations on the form and mobility of nitrogen in soils of the eastern escarpment region of south africa
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/7680
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