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The role of plant residues in pH change of acid soils differing in initial pH
Authors:JM Xu  C Tang  ZL Chen
Institution:a Institute of Soil and Water Resources and Environmental Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310029, China
b Department of Agricultural Sciences, La Trobe University, Bundoora (Melbourne), Vic. 3086, Australia
c Centre for Environmental Risk Assessment and Remediation, University of South Australia, Mawson Lakes, SA 5095, Australia
Abstract:Reports on the effect of plant residues on soil pH have been contradictory. The conflicting accounts have been suggested to result from differences in compositions and types of plant residues and characteristics of soils. This incubation study examined the effect of plant residues differing in concentrations of N (3-49 g kg−1) and of alkalinity (excess cations) (220-1560 mmol kg−1) on pH change of three soils differing in initial pH (3.9-5.1 in 0.01 M CaCl2). The addition of plant residues at a rate of 15 g kg−1 soil weight increased the pH of all soils by up to 3.4 units and the pH reached the maximum at day 42 after incubation for Wodjil (initial pH 3.87) and Bodallin (pH 4.54) soils and day 14 for Lancelin soil (pH 5.1). The amount of pH buffering was decreased by residue addition in Wodjil soil, increased in Bodallin soil and remained unchanged in Lancelin soil, which closely related to changes of soil pH. Residue addition increased View the MathML source concentration and the increase in View the MathML source concentration generally correlated positively with the concentration of residue N. The View the MathML source concentration increased with time, reached the peak at Days 42-105 for Wodjil soil, Days 14-105 for Bodallin soil and Days 14-42 for Lancelin soil, and then decreased only in Lancelin soil. The concentration of View the MathML source was kept minimal in Wodjil and Bodallin soils. In Lancelin soil, View the MathML source concentrations increased with incubation time from days 14-28. Irrespective of plant residue and incubation time, the amounts of alkalinity produced due to residue addition correlated highly with the sum of the alkalinity added as plant residues (excess cations) and those resulting from mineralization of residue N, with the slope of regression lines decreasing with increase of the initial soil pH. Direct shaking of soil with the residues at the same rate of alkalinity (excess cations) under sterile conditions increased the pH of the Wodjil soil but decreased it in the Lancelin soil. It is suggested that the decarboxylation of organic anions (as indicated by excess cations) of added plant residues and ammonification of the residue N causes soil pH increase whereas nitrification of mineralised residue nitrogen causes soil pH decrease, and that the association/dissociation of organic compounds also plays a role in soil pH change, depending initial pH of the soil. The overall effect on soil pH after addition of plant residues would therefore depend on the extent of each of these processes under given conditions.
Keywords:Ash alkalinity  Chemical composition  C:N ratio  Decomposition  N transformation  Organic anions  Plant material  Residue type  Soil acidification
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