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Ferralsols and Plinthosols

Ferralsols and Plinthosols. Peter Schad Chair of Soil Science Technische Universität München (Munich University of Technology). Ferralsols and Plinthosols. occur in the - permanently humid tropics - summer-humid tropics. Factors of soil formation. climate parent materials biota

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Ferralsols and Plinthosols

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  1. Ferralsols and Plinthosols Peter Schad Chair of Soil Science Technische Universität München (Munich University of Technology)

  2. Ferralsols and Plinthosols occur in the - permanently humid tropics - summer-humid tropics Factors of soil formation climate parent materials biota topography time Which ones differ largely comparing the tropics with Europe?

  3. Climate • high temperatures and high precipitation: • 1. chemical weathering increased • 2. decomposition of organic matter increased • 3. ion leaching increased Time many parts of the old Gondwana continent: - South American lowlands - most parts of Africa - India - western Australia no ice in the Pleistocene (Central and Northern Europe: nearly all soils began their formation after the Pleistocene)

  4. Main process of soil formation: ferralitization 1. weathering of silicates, mainly by hydrolysis 2. leaching out of base cations and silicon ions 3. formation of kaolinite and oxides

  5. Mineral constituents of Ferralsols and Plinthosols 1. quartz (residual): SiO2 2. kaolinite: 1:1 clay mineral 3. iron oxides: hematite: red, high temperatures: Fe2O3 goethite: brown, everywhere: FeOOH 4. aluminum oxides: gibbsite: Al(OH)3

  6. Definition of Ferralsols 1. having a ferralic horizon at some depth between 25 and 200 cm from the soil surface and 2. lacking a nitic horizon within 100 cm from the soil surface and 3. lacking a layer which fulfills the requirements of an argic horizon and which has in the upper 30 cm, 10 percent or more water-dispersible clay (unless the soil material has geric properties or more than 1.4 percent organic carbon)

  7. Definition of the ferralic horizon (1) A ferralic horizon must have: 1. a sandy loam or finer particle size and less than 90 percent (by weight) gravel, stones or petroplinthic (iron-manganese) concretions; and 2. a cation exchange capacity (by 1 M NH4OAc) of 16 cmolc kg-1 clay or less and an effective cation exchange capacity (sum of exchangeable bases plus exchangeable acidity in 1 M KCl) of less than 12 cmolc kg-1 clay; and

  8. Definition of the ferralic horizon (2) 3. less than 10% water-dispersible clay, unless the soil material has geric properties or more than 1.4 percent organic carbon; and 4. less than 10 percent weatherable minerals in the 50 - 200 µm fraction; and 5. no characteristics diagnostic for the andic horizon; and 6. thickness of at least 30 cm.

  9. Porfile depth often several meters, up to 100 m deeper horizons: saprolite chemical weathering in situ nothing else happens: - little physical weathering - almost no organisms - no translocations -> rock structure remains unchanged -> low bulk density (ions washed out, but volume remains)

  10. Physical characteristics (1) microaggregates: kaolinite-oxide-complexes kaolinite: neg. charged (unless the pH is very low) oxides: pos. charged (pH <6.5) also called: pseudosand, pseudosilt (-> problems with the field detection of texture by feel) stable, little erosion risk fall to pieces if pH rises over 6.5

  11. Physical characteristics (2) pseudosand -> many macropores -> good aeration, good drainage high clay content -> many micropores few mesopores -> low plant available water capacity permanently humid tropics: no problem tropics with dry seasons: may be a problem

  12. Chemical characteristics (1) organic matter: 1. rapid decomposition and intensive bioturbation - high rainfall - high temperature - good drainage -> only few organic acids pH only moderately acid (often ca. 5) 2. high biomass production -> many plant residues -> rel. high stocks of org. matter in the min. soil

  13. Chemical characteristics (2) mineral constituents: - low CEC - little nutrient release by weathering of primary minerals (only a few primary minerals left) organic constituents: - high CEC - high nutrient release by decomposition

  14. Chemical characteristics (3) special problem: phosphate: at pH < 5: bound to oxides problem: there are many oxides in Ferralsols available P: by mineralization of organic matter

  15. Land use traditional: shifting cultivation: slash and burn: 2 – 4 years of agriculture 10 – 20 years of forest fallow modern intensive agriculture: possible if: - large amounts of mineral fertilizers (-> expensive) - no tillage (avoid too fast mineralization and erosion) modern alternative: agroforestry systems

  16. Distribution of Ferralsols

  17. Ferralsol in Burkina Faso under Tectona grandis

  18. Ferralsol in Brazil under soybean

  19. Ferralsol in Bolivia with saprolite in greater depth

  20. the soils are physically stable savanna (above) forest (below)

  21. Formation of Plinthosols (1) • 3. iron distribution by redox processes: • groundwater (gleyic properties): • Fe oxides accumulate at the aggregate surfaces • rainwater or floodwater (stagnic properties): • Fe oxides accumulate in the centres of the aggregates 1. ferralitization: relative enrichment of Fe in situ 2. some Plinthosols: absolute enrichment of Fe: in depressions: - laterally flowing water - capillary rise of groundwater

  22. Formation of Plinthosols (2) groundwater: processes 2 and 3 together groundwater: under the enriched horizon: pallid zone: white (pure kaolinite, Fe-depleted) former horizon with permanently reduced cond. most Plinthosols: redox processes actually not ongoing

  23. Hardening in Plinthosols (1) • hardening: • if enough crystalline iron oxides accumulate • may harden under water-logged conditions • may harden deep in the soil • but it always hardens : • - when exposed near to the surface • - and subject to alternating drying and wetting over a long time first result: soft horizon with special colour pattern: plinthite then: may harden: - hard concretions: pisolithes possible if originated by stagnic properties - continuously cemented horizon: petroplinthite possible in both cases (originated by stagnic or gleyic properties)

  24. Definition of Plinthosols Soils having either 1. a petroplinthic horizon starting within 50 cm from the soil surface; or 2. a plinthic horizon within 50 cm from the soil surface; or 3. a plinthic horizon starting within 100 cm from the soil surface when underlying either an albic horizon or a horizon with stagnic properties

  25. Definition of the plinthic horizon (1) A plinthic horizon must have: 1. 25 percent (by volume) or more of an iron-rich, humus-poor mixture of kaolinitic clay with quartz and other diluents, which changes irreversibly to a hardpan or to irregular aggregates on exposure to repeated wetting and drying with free access of oxygen; and

  26. Definition of the plinthic horizon (2) 2. a. 2.5 percent (by weight) or more citrate-dithionite extractable iron in the fine earth fraction, especially in the upper part of the horizon, or 10 percent in the mottles or concretions; and b. ratio between acid oxalate (pH3) extractable iron and citrate-dithionite extractable iron of less than 0.1; and 3. less than 0.6 percent (by weight) organic carbon; and 4. thickness of 15 cm or more

  27. Definition of the petroplinthic horizon (1) A petroplinthic horizon must have: 1. a. 10 percent (by weight) or more citrate-dithionite extractable iron, at least in the upper part of the horizon; and b. ratio between acid oxalate (pH3) extractable iron and citrate-dithionite extractable iron of less than 0.1; and

  28. Definition of the petroplinthic horizon (2) 2. less than 0.6 percent (by weight) organic carbon; and 3. cementation to the extent that dry fragments do not slake in water and it cannot be penetrated by roots 4. thickness of 10 cm or more

  29. We regard as plinthic horizon - plinthite (soft) - horizon with pisolithes - petroplinthite missing the iron oxide requirements (criterion 1) of the petroplinthic horizon (diagnostic criteria of the plinthic horizon have to be met)

  30. Characteristics physical characteristics: dominated by plinthite, petroplinthite or pisolithes chemical characteristics: like Ferralsols land use: do not expose the plinthite to the surface -> risk of hardening

  31. Distribution of Plinthosols

  32. Plinthosol in Bolivia with a soft plinthic horizon

  33. Soil in Bolivia with pisolithes

  34. Soil in Bolivia with a petroplinthic horizon

  35. Soil in South Africa with a petroplinthic horizon and a pallid zone underneath

  36. Petroplinthic horizons at the surface

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