4.1 Article

Soils of the northern part of the Subpolar Urals: Morphology, physicochemical properties, and carbon and nitrogen pools

Journal

EURASIAN SOIL SCIENCE
Volume 46, Issue 5, Pages 459-467

Publisher

PLEIADES PUBLISHING INC
DOI: 10.1134/S1064229313050025

Keywords

northernmost taiga; Yugyd Va National Park; carbon and nitrogen pools in soils

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Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [11-04-00885 a]
  2. Program of the Presidium of the Russian Academy of Sciences [12-P-4-1018]

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The morphology and physicochemical properties of mountain-tundra and mountain-forest soils of the Subpolar Urals are analyzed. Gleyic humus-illuvial podburs, in combination with humus-illuvial podburs and raw-humus gleyzems, predominate in the mountain-tundra zone; permafrost-affected gleyzems and peat gleyzems with a shallow (30-50 cm) permafrost table are developed on colluvial fans at the foots-lopes. Iron-illuvial podzols, iron-illuvial svetlozems, eluviated burozems, texture-differentiated podzolic soils with a microprofile of a podzol, and gleyed peat-podzolic soils occur in the mountain-forest zone. The organic carbon and nitrogen pools in the soils considerably vary depending on the soil type and local landscape conditions. The organic carbon pool stored in the upper 50 cm of the soil profile varies from 7.7 to 39.3 kg/m(2) in the mountain-tundra soils and from 6.5 to 11.8 kg/m(2) in the mountain-forest soils. The corresponding values for the nitrogen pool are 0.4-2.4 and 0.4-0.8 kg/m(2), respectively.

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