Formation and mobility of soil organic carbon in a buried humic horizon of a volcanic ash soil

HANDLE Open Access

Search this article

Abstract

A buried humic horizon (^<14>C age between 5.4 to 6.8 kyr BP) of a volcanic ash soil in Aomori, Japan, which was collected from the depth between 147 and 187 cm at 5 cm-interval (total 8 sub-horizon samples), was investigated to clarify the degree of received biological transformation and mobility of soil organic carbon (SOC) fractions. The SOC fractions were prepared from each sub-horizon samples by extraction and precipitation procedures with controlling pH of the extracted solution, resulting in humin, humic acid (HA), and four fulvic acid (FA) fractions (two hydrophilic FA fractions: FA1 and FA2, and two hydrophobic FA fractions: FA3 and FAIHSS). The prepared SOC fractions were characterized by ^<14>C age and stable isotopic ratios of ^<13>C (δ^<13>C) and ^<15>N (δ^<15>N). The hydrophilic FA fractions showed the highest δ^<13>C and ^<15>N values, indicating that these SOC fractions had been most enriched with ^<13>C and ^<15>N by biological metabolic processes. On the other hand, the HA fraction showed the lowest δ^<13>C and δ^<15>N values, therefore this fraction would have been less-metabolized, although HA fraction has been regarded as well38 processed in general. The ^<14>C age of the HA fraction was almost same as the deposition age of the corresponding sub-horizon, indicating that the C in the HA fraction would have been fixed in situ right after photosynthesis by plants at the early stage of soil formation and chemically stabilized at soil surface, by fire event, etc. The average rates of vertical translocation of the SOC fractions were low (humin and HA fractions: < 1 mm per century, FA fractions: 1 to 4 mm per century), implying that the vertical translocation of SOC would not be the main mechanisms for forming thick humic horizons. The present study showed strong evidence of the in situ formation of SOC on soil surface, and successive up-building accumulation of soil particles containing SOC would contribute to the formation of the thick humic horizons.

Published version is available for viewing only. (See "Related URI")

Journal

  • Geoderma

    Geoderma 374 (114417), 2020-09-01

    Elsevier

Related Projects

See more

Details 詳細情報について

  • CRID
    1050580007680249856
  • NII Book ID
    AA11532266
  • HANDLE
    2324/4774162
  • ISSN
    00167061
    18726259
  • Text Lang
    en
  • Article Type
    journal article
  • Data Source
    • IRDB

Report a problem

Back to top