THE IMPORTANCE OF SOIL ACIDITY, MOISTURE, EXCHANGEABLE CATION POOLS AND ORGANIC-MATTER SOLUBILITY TO THE CATIONIC COMPOSITION OF BEECH FOREST (FAGUS-SYLVATICA L) SOIL SOLUTION

Citation
U. Falkengrengrerup et G. Tyler, THE IMPORTANCE OF SOIL ACIDITY, MOISTURE, EXCHANGEABLE CATION POOLS AND ORGANIC-MATTER SOLUBILITY TO THE CATIONIC COMPOSITION OF BEECH FOREST (FAGUS-SYLVATICA L) SOIL SOLUTION, Zeitschrift fur Pflanzenernahrung und Bodenkunde, 156(4), 1993, pp. 365-370
Citations number
20
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
ISSN journal
00443263
Volume
156
Issue
4
Year of publication
1993
Pages
365 - 370
Database
ISI
SICI code
0044-3263(1993)156:4<365:TIOSAM>2.0.ZU;2-#
Abstract
Humus horizons of dystric cambisols were sampled si, times during 1990 -1992 at 66 points along a beech forest transect in Scania, s. Sweden. Cation concentrations of soil solutions obtained by centrifugation of sifted samples at field moisture were related to pH, DOC, exchangeabl e pools of the cations and soil moisture. Soil solution Al was speciat ed in free ionic (easily reacting) Al(r) and organically complexed Al( org). Two or three variables accounted for a large share (70-90 %) of the cation variability between sampling points. Exchangeable soil pool s were the most important variables for K, Mg, Ca, and Mn and contribu ted more when calculated on C.E.C. than on soil dry weight. Some funct ion of pH was also of importance to most cation concentrations. Al(r) correlated well with both Al(org)(+) and pH(-). Soil moisture was posi tively related to DOC and K, negatively to H-ion concentration. pH mea sured by different methods were closely correlated (r = 0.93-0.97), pH (KCl) and pH(BaCl2) being ca. 0.5 unit lower, pH(H2O) ca. 0.3 unit hig her than soil solution pH, which varied between 3.5 and 5.6.