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Mitigation of soil acidification through changes in soil mineralogy due to long-term fertilization in southern China
Liang Tao; Fang-bai Li; Cheng-shuai Liu; Xiong-han Feng; Li-li Gu; Bo-ren Wang; Shi-lin Wen; Ming-gang Xu
2019
Source PublicationCatena (IF:3.191[JCR-2016],3.777[5-Year])
Volume174Pages:227–234
Abstract

Soil acidification is a natural process, and it is well known that soil acidification can be accelerated by long-term fertilization (LTF). Nevertheless, how this acidification occurs and how the mineralogies of iron oxides as the important active clay components in red soil respond to the acidification is still less understood. In this study, soil samples from 23 years (1990–2013) of long-term fertilization experiments were collected from the Qiyang Red Soil Experimental Station in southern China. The physicochemical properties of the soil samples were analyzed. A significant negative linear correlation between soil pH and log(Alpy) (complex-state aluminum) as well as log(Alexch) (exchangeable Al3+) illustrate that Alpy and Alexch are the most sensitive species to soil acidification compared with the other factors. In addition, the mineralogical characteristics of the iron oxides in five typical LTF treatments, including the control, chemical fertilizer N, NPK, NPK plus manure and manure were analyzed using the synchrotron differential XRD patterns (DXRD). The results obtained revealed that the LTF treatment with chemical N reduced the total content of iron oxides and the ratio of goethite to hematite (G/H value), and the transformation of iron oxides and accumulation of hematite in the soil would reduce the soil's buffering capacities to acidification. In contrast, the LTF treatments with manure (NPKM and M) presented the opposite trends. In addition, a positive relationship between soil pH and the IOsAlmol% (isomorphous substitution ratio of Al for Fe in iron oxides) was also found. Therefore, the potential acid Al3+ ions in soil are reduced through the ionic substitution of Al for Fe in the structure, which may further mitigate the process of soil acidification. These results provide new insights for further understanding the soil acidification processes induced by LTF and how those iron oxides respond to soil pH during soil acidification.

KeywordSoil Acidification Potential Acid al3+al Substituted Iron Oxides Differential X-ray Diffraction Spectra
Indexed BySCI
Language英语
Document Type期刊论文
Identifierhttp://ir.gyig.ac.cn/handle/42920512-1/10904
Collection环境地球化学国家重点实验室
Affiliation1.Guangdong Key Laboratory of Integrated Agro-environmental Pollution Control and Management, Guangdong Institute of Eco-environmental Science & Technology, Guangzhou 510650, PR China
2.State Key Laboratory of Environmental Geochemistry, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guiyang 550081, PR China
3.Key Laboratory of Arable Land Conservation (Middle and Lower Reaches of Yangtze River), Ministry of Agriculture, College of Resources and Environment, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan 430070, PR China
4.National Engineering Laboratory for Improving Quality of Arable Land, Institute of Agricultural Resources and Regional Planning, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100081, PR China
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Liang Tao,Fang-bai Li,Cheng-shuai Liu,et al. Mitigation of soil acidification through changes in soil mineralogy due to long-term fertilization in southern China[J]. Catena,2019,174:227–234.
APA Liang Tao.,Fang-bai Li.,Cheng-shuai Liu.,Xiong-han Feng.,Li-li Gu.,...&Ming-gang Xu.(2019).Mitigation of soil acidification through changes in soil mineralogy due to long-term fertilization in southern China.Catena,174,227–234.
MLA Liang Tao,et al."Mitigation of soil acidification through changes in soil mineralogy due to long-term fertilization in southern China".Catena 174(2019):227–234.
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