The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld

Wetland soils are highly effective ecosystems for long term storage of carbon. Prolonged periods of soil saturation stimulate high rates of productivity by appropriately adapted hydrophytic vegetation and cause a depletion of oxygen within the soil that significantly reduces the rate of mineralisati...

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Main Author: Fourie, Brendon
Other Authors: De Jager, Christiaan
Language:en
Published: University of Pretoria 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2263/70833
Fourie, B 2019, The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld, MSc Agric Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/70833>
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-up-oai-repository.up.ac.za-2263-708332020-11-20T05:11:22Z The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld Fourie, Brendon De Jager, Christiaan brendon.fourie01@gmail.com Mitchell, Steve UCTD Soil Science Wetland soils are highly effective ecosystems for long term storage of carbon. Prolonged periods of soil saturation stimulate high rates of productivity by appropriately adapted hydrophytic vegetation and cause a depletion of oxygen within the soil that significantly reduces the rate of mineralisation of organic material, the process that results in the release of CO2 back into the atmosphere. As a result, the rate of production exceeds the rate of mineralisation of organic material and leads to a net accumulation of soil organic carbon over time. This study aims to serve as a baseline estimate of carbon storage in wetlands of South Africa. This study was not intended to be on an extensive spatial scale but rather an intensive focus on carbon storage as well as spatial distribution, variation and factors that influence carbon storage. Three aspects of soil organic carbon were assessed for sections of four selected wetlands. Firstly, the soil organic carbon density was estimated in tons per hectare as well as the differences in soil organic carbon density of different wetland hydrological zones. Secondly, the nature and stability of soil organic carbon were assessed based on the proportion of soil organic carbon that was readily oxidised by potassium permanganate (permanganate oxidisable carbon). Lastly, correlations were assessed between soil organic carbon and the elements N, P, K, Ca, Mg, Mn, Fe, Cr, S, and Al to assess the relationships between soil concentrations of these elements and the density of soil organic carbon. Four wetlands were selected including three mineral and one organic wetland containing peat. The mean SOC densities of the three mineral wetlands at a soil thickness of 20 cm were 49.6 t ha-1 (tons per hectare), 54.5 t ha-1 and 413 t ha-1. The mean SOC density of the organic wetland was 127.0 t ha-1. There were significant differences in soil organic carbon density between different wetland hydrological zones, the highest densities found in the permanently saturated zones. A negative correlation between wetland disturbance in general and POXC content was found. Total soil N, P, and S concentration showed the highest correlation between SOC and soil POXC concentration. The soil concentrations of Fe, Mn and S did not seem to have any appreciable relationship with the oxidisability of SOC or SOC density. Dissertation (MSc Agric)--University of Pretoria, 2019. Plant Production and Soil Science MSc Agric Unrestricted 2019-07-31T08:21:53Z 2019-07-31T08:21:53Z 2015-04-15 2019 Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2263/70833 Fourie, B 2019, The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld, MSc Agric Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/70833> A2020 en © 2019 University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the University of Pretoria. University of Pretoria
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic UCTD
Soil Science
spellingShingle UCTD
Soil Science
Fourie, Brendon
The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld
description Wetland soils are highly effective ecosystems for long term storage of carbon. Prolonged periods of soil saturation stimulate high rates of productivity by appropriately adapted hydrophytic vegetation and cause a depletion of oxygen within the soil that significantly reduces the rate of mineralisation of organic material, the process that results in the release of CO2 back into the atmosphere. As a result, the rate of production exceeds the rate of mineralisation of organic material and leads to a net accumulation of soil organic carbon over time. This study aims to serve as a baseline estimate of carbon storage in wetlands of South Africa. This study was not intended to be on an extensive spatial scale but rather an intensive focus on carbon storage as well as spatial distribution, variation and factors that influence carbon storage. Three aspects of soil organic carbon were assessed for sections of four selected wetlands. Firstly, the soil organic carbon density was estimated in tons per hectare as well as the differences in soil organic carbon density of different wetland hydrological zones. Secondly, the nature and stability of soil organic carbon were assessed based on the proportion of soil organic carbon that was readily oxidised by potassium permanganate (permanganate oxidisable carbon). Lastly, correlations were assessed between soil organic carbon and the elements N, P, K, Ca, Mg, Mn, Fe, Cr, S, and Al to assess the relationships between soil concentrations of these elements and the density of soil organic carbon. Four wetlands were selected including three mineral and one organic wetland containing peat. The mean SOC densities of the three mineral wetlands at a soil thickness of 20 cm were 49.6 t ha-1 (tons per hectare), 54.5 t ha-1 and 413 t ha-1. The mean SOC density of the organic wetland was 127.0 t ha-1. There were significant differences in soil organic carbon density between different wetland hydrological zones, the highest densities found in the permanently saturated zones. A negative correlation between wetland disturbance in general and POXC content was found. Total soil N, P, and S concentration showed the highest correlation between SOC and soil POXC concentration. The soil concentrations of Fe, Mn and S did not seem to have any appreciable relationship with the oxidisability of SOC or SOC density. === Dissertation (MSc Agric)--University of Pretoria, 2019. === Plant Production and Soil Science === MSc Agric === Unrestricted
author2 De Jager, Christiaan
author_facet De Jager, Christiaan
Fourie, Brendon
author Fourie, Brendon
author_sort Fourie, Brendon
title The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld
title_short The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld
title_full The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld
title_fullStr The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld
title_full_unstemmed The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld
title_sort density, permanganate oxidisability, and stability of soil organic carbon in wetlands of the south african highveld
publisher University of Pretoria
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2263/70833
Fourie, B 2019, The Density, Permanganate Oxidisability, and Stability of Soil Organic Carbon in Wetlands of the South African Highveld, MSc Agric Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/70833>
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