Spectroscopic characterization of soil organic matter in long-term amendment trials

Citation
O. Francioso et al., Spectroscopic characterization of soil organic matter in long-term amendment trials, SOIL SCI, 165(6), 2000, pp. 495-504
Citations number
45
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
SOIL SCIENCE
ISSN journal
0038075X → ACNP
Volume
165
Issue
6
Year of publication
2000
Pages
495 - 504
Database
ISI
SICI code
0038-075X(200006)165:6<495:SCOSOM>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
FT-IR, FT-Raman, and H-1-NMR spectroscopies were applied to investigate mol ecular changes in soil organic matter (SOM) treated with different biomasse s, The experiment consisted of several plots of soil treated over a 22-year period (from 1972 to 1994) with different amendments: cattle manure (CM), cow slurries (CS), and crop residues (CR), Samples taken from these plots w ere analyzed and compared with the unamended soil (C), which was used as th e control sample. The samples were analyzed for both total organic carbon ( TOC) and total nitrogen (N) content, both at the beginning of the study and after 22 years of treatments. The plots amended with CS and CR and the una mended plots showed a decrease in TOC and N after 22 years when compared wi th the control at the beginning of the experiment. However, the amended soi l with CM showed a linear increase in TOC and N in relation to the control. The above mentioned spectroscopic procedures were employed to characterize both the unfractionated SOM and the low molecular weight (LMW) fraction ext racted in an acidic medium. This spectroscopic analysis revealed that the c omposition of the soils amended with CM varied significantly in relation to the other amendments in the sense that the more aliphatic and aromatic moi eties are resistant to the degradation. This is corroborated by the spectro scopic analysis of the LMW fraction, which is richer in small aromatic and aliphatic carboxylic acids in the soil amended with CM, The results shown i n this work reveal that the SOM formed during the amendment with CM might b e more resistant to the process of decomposition.