Abstract

Soil acidification is one of major pedogenetic processes under tropical forests, however, proton sources and weathering reactions vary from soil to soil. The dominant soil-acidifying processes, along with their spatial heterogeneity, under tropical forests were analyzed for five Indonesian soils formed from different parent materials (serpentine and sedimentary rocks). The contribution of different proton sources to soil acidification was quantified based on the theory of proton budget by measuring fluxes of solutes leaching and vegetation uptake. Excess cation accumulation in wood (3.0–8.6 kmol c ha − 1 yr − 1 ) was a dominant acidification process in all the soil profiles due to the high net primary production in this tropical region. However, the dominant proton-generating and consuming processes varied with soil horizons and parent materials. In moderately acidic soils from serpentine and mudstone, protons generated by nitrification, dissociation of carbonic and organic acids and vegetation uptake contributed to acidification of the mineral soil horizons (2.4–4.3 kmol c ha − 1 yr − 1 ), but they could completely be neutralized by basic cations. A higher acid neutralizing capacity (ANC) of these soils weakened acidity and contributed to accumulation of Al and Fe oxides through in situ weathering. In highly acidic soils from sandstone, protons generated by dissociation of organic acids and vegetation uptake in the O horizons (1.6–3.6 kmol c ha − 1 yr − 1 ) could not completely be neutralized owing to the lower ANC, which resulted in eluviation of protons, Al and Fe from the surface soil horizons. In this tropical region, parent materials influence pedogenetic acidification processes at a local scale through effects on the intensity and distribution of acids and ANC of litter and soils.

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