4.6 Article

Soil Organic Carbon and Geochemical Characteristics on Different Rocks and Their Significance for Carbon Cycles

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fenvs.2021.784868

Keywords

SOC; soil in the mineral horizon; bedrock; organic-transition metal complexes; global carbon cycle

Funding

  1. Chinese National Key Natural Science Foundation [90202017]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province [ZR2018MD012]

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Bedrock has an impact on soil organic carbon content, and soils from different bedrocks have different geochemical properties. Organic transition metal complexes play an important role in the stability of organic carbon in the mineral horizon. The influence of bedrock on global carbon cycles and SOC is significant.
Soil organic carbon (SOC) is significant for soil quality and global carbon cycles. SOC was observed to be related to soil geochemistry, and soils originating from different bedrocks have different geochemical properties, but the effect of bedrock on SOC is still undefined. Soils overlying different bedrocks in Zhenxiong County and Weixin County were sampled. Specifically, soils in the mineral horizon, which are less affected by the external environment than surface soils, are focused on to reveal the effect of bedrock on SOC. Al/Ti, Fe/Ti, and Al/Fe indicate a soil-rock successive relationship. SOC contents in the mineral horizon are 0.19-2.74% (1.24% on average), and those in the surface horizon are 1.26-4.01% (2.63% on average). SOC contents in the surface and mineral horizons of the same bedrock are significantly positively correlated, implying that the bedrock is an important factor affecting SOC. SOC in the mineral horizon is related to the first transition metal ions. Significantly, positive correlations of SOC (p < 0.01) with Co, Cu, Ti, V, and Zn, and a positive correlation (p < 0.05) with Ni were observed in the mineral horizon. Organic transition metal complexation seems to play an important role in governing SOC in the mineral horizon. That is, the complexation maintains organic carbon stability, slows down its decomposition rate, and accumulates organic carbon. The Ca-SOC positive correlation in the mineral horizon exits because Ca also can complex with organic carbon. Co, Cu, and V-SOC positive correlations (p < 0.05) were also observed, but there were no significant positive correlations (p < 0.01) in the surface horizon because surface SOC had diversified sources. An SOC evolution model influenced by the bedrock was forwarded. Thus, the different soil geochemistry originating from different bedrocks should be noticed when SOC and global carbon cycles are discussed.

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