Abstract

BackgroundWe applied Fourier-Transformed Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) techniques in combination with selective humus extractions to investigate in situ the chemical features of organic matter in three soil profiles recently developed from Dutch sand dunes, under well-documented vegetation sequence and containing a relatively simple mineral-organic matter system. Water-soluble and alkaline-soluble extracts were also studied to match the changes of humus in the soil residues.ResultsDiffuse Reflectance Infrared Fourier Transform (DRIFT) and transmission spectra differed in resolution and sensitivity. DRIFT was superior in revealing structural information on the organic matter present in the soil samples whereas transmission spectra showed higher resolution for the bands of inorganic material at lower spectral frequencies. Differences between H and B horizons were due to the amount of hydrophilic organic acids, partly unsaturated, that were extracted by alkali. Extractable carboxylic acids and other hydrophilic compounds such as peptides and carbohydrates were larger in the less developed soils under pine and crowberry than in the more advanced profiles under beech. Humin residues from both H and B horizons retained unextractable aliphatic components and carboxylic groups involved in strong complexes with minerals, thereby confirming other findings that showed the largely aliphatic character of the unextractable humic fraction. Accumulation of poorly-soluble organic materials in these soils occur by protection from biodegradation due both to complexation with soil minerals and to a process by which apolar humic constituents form a separate hydrophobic phase where no biological activity can take place. Transport of poorly soluble compounds from H to B horizons, noticed especially in the more developed profiles, may have occurred through humic aggregates containing hydrophobic phases.ConclusionsThis work shows that the DRIFT technique in combination with soil chemical treatments can be suitably employed to investigate the changes of organic matter in whole soil samples and represents a valid tool to investigate the role of organic matter in soil profile development.

Highlights

  • We applied Fourier-Transformed Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) techniques in combination with selective humus extractions to investigate in situ the chemical features of organic matter in three soil profiles recently developed from Dutch sand dunes, under well-documented vegetation sequence and containing a relatively simple mineral-organic matter system

  • A general increase in C content is observed in all profiles when passing from the whole soil sample to the water- and alkali-extracts

  • The presence of more biologically stable humus in profiles II and III, as compared to profile I, is confirmed by the decreasing trend shown by the C/N values of each horizon’s fraction when passing from the latter to the former profiles, except for total soil and humin of B-horizon, probably because of the different quality of soil organic matter [18]

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Summary

Introduction

We applied Fourier-Transformed Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) techniques in combination with selective humus extractions to investigate in situ the chemical features of organic matter in three soil profiles recently developed from Dutch sand dunes, under well-documented vegetation sequence and containing a relatively simple mineral-organic matter system. The traditional approach to obtain physical–chemical information on the structure of soil organic matter is that of a quantitative extraction from soils [1]. Few methods allow the study of soil organic matter without preliminary extraction that may alter its features to an unknown extent. These are mainly limited to solidstate 13C-NMR and Fourier-Transformed infrared spectroscopy (FT) as common transmission spectra by pellet technique or as DRIFT (Diffuse Reflectance Infrared Fourier Transform). Infrared techniques are rapid, require much less sample, and are very reproducible Because of these advantages, infrared spectroscopy has been a traditional and powerful tool of soil organic matter chemistry even before the use of advanced FTIR instruments [1]

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