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Long-term trends in fertility of soils under continuous cultivation and cereal cropping in southern queensland. iii* Distribution and kinetics of soil organic carbon in particle-size fractions

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Dalal, R.C. and Mayer, R. J. (1986) Long-term trends in fertility of soils under continuous cultivation and cereal cropping in southern queensland. iii* Distribution and kinetics of soil organic carbon in particle-size fractions. Australian Journal of Soil Research, 24 (2). pp. 293-300. ISSN 0004-9573

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Article Link: https://doi.org/10.1071/SR9860293

Abstract

Distribution of soil organic carbon in sand-, silt- and clay-size fractions during cultivation for periods ranging from 20 to 70 years was studied in six major soils used for cereal cropping in southern Queensland. Particle-size fractions were obtained by dispersion in water using cation exchange resin, sieving and sedimentation. In the soils' virgin state no single particle-size fraction was found to be consistently enriched as compared to the whole soil in organic C in all six soils, although the largest proportion (48%) of organic C was in the clay-size fraction; silt and sand-size fractions contained remaining organic C in equal amounts. Upon cultivation, the amounts of organic C declined from all particle-size fractions in most soils, although the loss rates differed considerably among different fractions and from the whole soil. The proportion of the sand-size fraction declined rapidly (from 26% to 12% overall), whereas that of the clay-size fraction increased from 48% to 61% overall. The proportion of silt-size organic C was least affected by cultivation in most soils. It was inferred, therefore, that the sand-size organic matter is rapidly lost from soil, through mineralization as well as disintegration into silt-size and clay-size fractions, and that the clay fraction provides protection for the soil organic matter against microbial and enzymic degradation.

Item Type:Article
Subjects:Agriculture > Agriculture (General) > Soils. Soil science > Soil chemistry
Agriculture > Agriculture (General) > Soils. Soil science > Soil and crops. Soil-plant relationships. Soil productivity
Live Archive:14 Feb 2024 22:36
Last Modified:14 Feb 2024 22:36

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