Book Chapter10.1016/B978-0-12-385531-2.00001-3
Dissolved Organic Matter: Biogeochemistry, Dynamics, and Environmental Significance in Soils
Nanthi Bolan,Domy C. Adriano,Anitha Kunhikrishnan,Trevor K. James,Richard W. McDowell,Nicola Senesi +5 more
710
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight knowledge on the production of dissolved organic matter in soils under different management regimes, identify its sources and sinks, and integrate its dynamics with various soil processes.
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Abstract: Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is defined as the organic matter fraction in solution that passes through a 0.45 μm filter. Although DOM is ubiquitous in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, it represents only a small proportion of the total organic matter in soil. However, DOM, being the most mobile and actively cycling organic matter fraction, influences a spectrum of biogeochemical processes in the aquatic and terrestrial environments. Biological fixation of atmospheric CO 2 during photosynthesis by higher plants is the primary driver of global carbon cycle. A major portion of the carbon in organic matter in the aquatic environment is derived from the transport of carbon produced in the terrestrial environment. However, much of the terrestrially produced DOM is consumed by microbes, photo degraded, or adsorbed in soils and sediments as it passes to the ocean. The majority of DOM in terrestrial and aquatic environments is ultimately returned to atmosphere as CO 2 through microbial respiration, thereby renewing the atmospheric CO 2 reserve for photosynthesis. Dissolved organic matter plays a significant role in influencing the dynamics and interactions of nutrients and contaminants in soils and microbial functions, thereby serving as a sensitive indicator of shifts in ecological processes. This chapter aims to highlight knowledge on the production of DOM in soils under different management regimes, identify its sources and sinks, and integrate its dynamics with various soil processes. Understanding the significance of DOM in soil processes can enhance development of strategies to mitigate DOM-induced environmental impacts. This review encourages greater interactions between terrestrial and aquatic biogeochemists and ecologists, which is essential for unraveling the fundamental biogeochemical processes involved in the synthesis of DOM in terrestrial ecosystem, its subsequent transport to aquatic ecosystem, and its role in environmental sustainability, buffering of nutrients and pollutants (metal(loid)s and organics), and the net effect on the global carbon cycle.
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Citations
Impact of organic matter on transformation during thermal remediation of pyrene-contaminated substrates.
Cameron P. Oden,Charles J. Werth,B. Kienzle,L. E. Katz +3 more
TL;DR: Organic matter enhances pyrene transformation during thermal remediation, promoting oxidation and reductive hydrogenation mechanisms, and increasing contaminant removal efficiency, particularly at lower temperatures, with implications for designing more effective and energy-efficient remediation systems.
3
Resolving Spatial And Temperal Variability in Dissolved Organic Matter Characteristics Within Combined Agricultural and Stormwater Conveyances
Bryce Mihalevich,Tony Melcher,Jeff Horsburgh +2 more
- 01 Jan 2017
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors resolve spatial and temporal variance in DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER CHARACTERISTICS withIN COMBINED AGRICULTURAL and STORMWATER CONVEYANCES.
Adsorption: An Important Phenomenon in Controlling Soil Properties and Carbon Stabilization
Omari Sufian
- 01 Jan 2021
TL;DR: In this article, the mechanisms through which soil minerals interact and hence adsorb organic carbon (OC) are investigated, and it is well established that soil plays a significant role in the control of the global carbon cycle through sorption of OC and stabilizing it.
3
Effect of reclamation of abandoned salinized farmland on nematode community in arid northwest China
TL;DR: Zhang et al. as discussed by the authors identified the response of the nematode community to reclamation and examined the relationships between soil properties and nematodes, and determined their trophic groups from four reclamation treatments: natural succession (CK), cropland (CL), grassland (GL), and woodland (WL).
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The impact of alder litter on chemistry of Technosols developed from lignite combustion waste and natural sandy substrate: a laboratory experiment.
TL;DR: Among the investigated species, black alder had the greatest impact on the chemistry of substrates and solutions, and the dynamic of these processes has a different path at various substrates.
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