Book Chapter10.1016/BS.AGRON.2014.10.005
Chapter One – Mineral–Organic Associations: Formation, Properties, and Relevance in Soil Environments
Markus Kleber,Karin Eusterhues,Marco Keiluweit,Christian Mikutta,Robert Mikutta,Peter S. Nico +5 more
1.2K
TL;DR: An overview of the current knowledge on mineral-organic associations can be found in this article, where the authors identify key questions and future research needs, as well as a survey of the existing research work.
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Abstract: Minerals and organic matter (OM) may form intricate associations via myriad interactions. In soils, the associations of OM with mineral surfaces are mainly investigated because of their role in determining the long-term retention of OM. OM “must decay in order to release the energy and nutrients that drive live processes all over the planet” ( Janzen, 2006 ). Thus, the processes and mechanisms that retain OM in soil are a central concern to very different branches of environmental research. An agronomist may want to synchronize periods of high nutrient and energy release with the growth stages of a crop. An environmental chemist may wish to either immobilize an organic soil contaminant or enhance its decomposition into less harmful metabolites, while climate scientists need to understand the processes that mediate the production of potent greenhouse gases from decomposing OM. Associations of OM with pedogenic minerals (henceforth termed mineral–organic associations (MOAs)) are known to be key controls in these and many other processes. Here we strive to present an overview of the current knowledge on MOAs and identify key questions and future research needs.
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Citations
Organic P in temperate forest mineral soils as affected by humus form and mineralogical characteristics and its relationship to the foliar P content of European beech
Dan Paul Zederer,Ulrike Talkner +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the main influencing factors on organic phosphorus deficiency of beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) in forest soils and test its usefulness as a predictor of the foliar P content.
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Stabilization of mineral-associated organic carbon in Pleistocene permafrost
Jannik Martens,Carsten W. Mueller,Prachi Joshi,Christopher Rosinger,Markus Maisch,Andreas Kappler,Michael Bonkowski,Georg Schwamborn,Lutz Schirrmeister,Janet Rethemeyer +9 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors study different OM fractions in Siberian permafrost deposited during colder and warmer periods of the past 55,000 years and show that preservation of carbon in mineral-associated OM is enhanced by reactive iron minerals particularly during cold and dry climate, reflected by low microbial CO 2 production in incubation experiments.
Microbial formation and stabilisation of soil organic carbon is regulated by carbon substrate identity and mineral composition
Shuang Wang,Marc Redmile-Gordon,Muhammad Shahbaz,Tida Ge,Ming Zhang,Yichao Wu,Jun Liu,Qiaoyun Huang,Peng Cai +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors evaluated the role of substrate identity and mineralogy on organic carbon formation and stabilisation and found that soil organic C (SOC) is formed mainly from non-metabolised and recalcitrant organic residues.
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Long-term agricultural management and erosion change soil organic matter chemistry and association with minerals
TL;DR: In the cultivated hillslopes, aromatic and phenolic C species were more abundant in depositional soils than in the eroding topsoils, indicating that deposition and burial of eroded or in-situ plant-derived phenolics protected them from further transformation.
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Soil organic carbon sequestration in agricultural long-term field experiments as derived from particulate and mineral-associated organic matter
Christoph Dr Just,Martin Armbruster,Dietmar Barkusky,Michael Baumecker,Michael Diepolder,Thomas F. Döring,Bernd Honermeier,M. Jate,Ines Merbach,David Schubert,Franziska Schulz,Kathlin Schweitzer,Sabine J. Seidel,Michael Sommer,Heide Spiegel,Ulrich Thumm,Peer Urbatzka,Jörg Zimmer,Ingrid Kögel-Knabner,Martin Wiesmeier +19 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors analyzed changes in fast-cycling particulate organic matter (POM) and slow-cycled mineral-associated organic matter induced by common management practices, i.e., fertilization and crop rotation in topsoils from 25 Central European long-term field experiments.
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