Abstract

Soil humin (HN), a major long-term sink for carbon in the pedosphere, plays a key role in the global carbon cycle, and has been less extensively studied than the humic and fulvic acids components. There are increasing concerns about the depletions of soil organic matter (SOM) arising from modern soil cultivation practices but there has been little focus on how HN can be altered as the result. This study has compared the HN components in a soil under cultivation for wheat for >30 years with those from an adjacent contiguous soil that had been under long-term grass for all that time. A urea-fortified basic solution isolated additional humic fractions from soils that had been exhaustively extracted in basic media. Then further exhaustive extractions of the residual soil material with dimethyl sulfoxide, amended with sulphuric acid isolated what may be called the “true” HN fraction. The long-term cultivation resulted in a loss of 53 % soil organic carbon in the surface soil. Infrared and multi-NMR spectroscopies showed the “true” HN to be dominated by aliphatic hydrocarbons and carboxylated structures, but with clear evidence for lesser amounts of carbohydrate and peptide materials, and with weaker evidence for lignin-derived substances. These lesser-amount structures can be sorbed on the soil mineral colloid surfaces and/or covered by the hydrophobic HN component or entrained within these which have strong affinities for the mineral colloids. HN from the cultivated site contained less carbohydrate and more carboxyl groups suggesting slow transformations took place resulting from the cultivation, but these were much slower than for the other components of SOM. It is recommended that a study be made of the HN in a soil under long-term cultivation for which the SOM content has reached a steady state and where HN will be expected to dominate the components of SOM.

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