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Podzol

In soil science, podzols are the typical soils of coniferous or boreal forests and also the typical soils of eucalypt forests and heathlands in southern Australia. In Western Europe, podzols develop on heathland, which is often a construct of human interference through grazing and burning. In some British moorlands with podzolic soils, cambisols are preserved under Bronze Age barrows (Dimbleby, 1962).

Podzol
Podsol, Podosol, Spodosol, Espodossolo
The picture is of a stagnic podzol in upland Wales, and shows the typical sequence of organic topsoil with leached grey-white subsoil with iron-rich horizon below. This example has two weak ironpans.
Used inWRB, USDA soil taxonomy, others
WRB codePZ
ProfileO(Ah)EBhsC
Key processpodzolization
Parent materialquartz rich debris and sediment
Climatehumid continental, subarctic, oceanic, equatorial
H: common
O: always, has humified organic matter mixed with minerals
A: absent in most boreal podzols[1]
E: common, is ashen grey and leached in Fe and Al
B: always, receives Fe and Al through illuviation
C: common

Term

Podzol means "under-ash" and is derived from the Russian под (pod) + зола́ (zola); the full form is "подзо́листая по́чва" (podzolistaya pochva, "under-ashed soil"). The term was first given in middle of 1875 by Vasily Dokuchaev.[2][3] It refers to the common experience of Russian peasants of plowing up an apparent under-layer of ash (leached or E horizon) during first plowing of a virgin soil of this type.[4]

Characteristics

Podzols can occur on almost any parent material but generally derive from either quartz-rich sands and sandstone or sedimentary debris from magmatic rocks, provided there is high precipitation.[5] Most Podzols are poor soils for agriculture due to the sandy portion, resulting in a low level of moisture and nutrients. Some are sandy and excessively drained. Others have shallow rooting zones and poor drainage due to subsoil cementation. A low pH further compounds issues, along with phosphate deficiencies and aluminum toxicity. The best agricultural use of Podzols is for grazing, although well-drained loamy types can be very productive for crops if lime and fertilizer are used.

The E horizon (or Ae in Canadian soil classification system), which is usually 4 to 8 centimetres (1.6 to 3.1 in) thick, is low in Fe and Al oxides and humus. It is formed under moist, cool and acidic conditions, especially where the parent material, such as granite or sandstone, is rich in quartz. It is found under a layer of organic material in the process of decomposition, which is usually 5 to 10 centimetres (2.0 to 3.9 in) thick. In the middle, there is often a thin horizon of 0.5 to 1 centimetre (0.2 to 0.4 in). The bleached soil horizon, which always has a higher value than the horizons above and below it, goes over into a red or red-brown horizon (so-called Podzolic B). The colour is strongest in the upper part, and change at a depth of 50 to 100 centimetres (20 to 40 in) progressively to the part of the soil that is mainly not affected by processes; that is the parent material. The soil profiles are designated by the letters A (topsoil), E (eluviated soil), B (subsoil) and C (parent material).

In some Podzols, the E horizon is absent—either masked by biological activity or obliterated by disturbance. Podzols with little or no E horizon development are often classified as brown Podzolic soils, also called Umbrisols or Umbrepts.

Geographic distribution

 
Distribution of Podzol soils according to the World Reference Base for Soil Resources classification:
  Dominant (more than 50% of soil cover)
  Codominant (25-50%)
  Associated (5-25%)

Podzols cover about 4,850,000 square kilometres (1,870,000 sq mi) worldwide and are usually found under sclerophyllous woody vegetation. By extent Podzols are most common in temperate and boreal zones of the Northern Hemisphere but they can also be found in other settings including both temperate rainforests and tropical areas.[6]

In South America Podzols occur beneath Nothofagus betuloides forests in Tierra del Fuego.[7]

Podzolization

 
A Podzol with a characteristic eluvial (bleached, ash-colored) horizon and intensely coloured illuvial horizons. The photo was taken in the Feldberg area, Southern Black Forest, Germany.

Podzolization (or Podsolization[8]) is complex soil formation process by which dissolved organic matter and ions of iron and aluminium, released through weathering of various minerals, form organo-mineral complexes (chelates) and are moved from the upper parts of the soil profile and deposit in the deeper parts of soil. Through this process, the eluvial horizon becomes bleached and of ash-grey colour. The complexes move with percolating water further down to illuviated horizons which are commonly coloured brown, red or black as they accumulate and consist of cemented sesquioxides and/or organic compounds. The podzolization is a typical soil formation process in Podzols.[9][8]

Preconditions

Podzolization usually occurs under forest or heath vegetation and is common in cool and humid climates as these climates inhibit the activity of soil microbes in the topsoil. Overall, podzolization happens where the decomposition of organic matter is inhibited and as a result, acidic organic surface (mor) layers build up. Under these typically acidic conditions, nutrient deficiency further hampers the microbial degradation of organic complexing agents.[9][10] Medium to coarse textured soils with base-poor parent material (usually rich in quartz) also promote podzolization, as they encourage percolating water flow.[11][10]

Key steps

 
A conceptualization of the process of podzolization in a typical Podzol.

The soil-forming process of podzolization can be broken down into two main steps:

  1. Mobilization and translocation of organic matter, Fe and Al from the surface horizon, and
  2. Immobilization and stabilization of organic matter, Fe and Al into the subsoil.[12][10][13]

In the topsoil of acidic soils, organic matter (mostly from plant litter, the humus layer and root exudates) together with Al- and Fe-ions, form organo-mineral complexes. These soluble chelates then relocate with percolating water from the A (or E horizon) to the B horizon. As a result of this, the E horizon (or Ae horizon in the Canadian system of soil classification) is left bleached and ash-grey in colour, while the B horizon becomes enriched with relocated organo-mineral complexes. The colour of B horizon is consequently red, brown or black, depending on the dominance of metal ions or organic matter. Usually, the boundary between the B and eluvial Ae (or E) horizon is very distinct, and sometimes a hardpan (or Ortstein[11]) can form, as the relocated Fe and Al and organic matter increase mineral particles, cementing them into this compacted layer.[11][9][10]

There are several reasons why these organo-mineral complexes immobilize in the B horizon: If during the eluviation process more Al- or Fe-ions bind to the organic compounds, the complex can flocculate as the solubility of it decreases with increasing metal to carbon ratio. Apart from that, a higher pH (or higher Ca content) in the lower soil horizons can result in the breakdown of metal-humus complexes. In the lower soil layers, the organic complexing agents can be degraded by functioning microorganisms. Already established complexes in the B horizon can act as a filter, as they adsorb the traveling complexes from the upper soil horizons. A decreased water conductivity due to higher clay content can also result in the early flocculation of organo-mineral complexes.[9][10]

The relocated substances can sometimes separate in the illuvial horizons. Then, organic substances are mostly enriched in the uppermost part of the illuvial horizon, whereas Fe- and Al-oxides are mostly found in the lower parts of the illuvial horizon.[9]

Podzolization also promotes the relocation of some nutrients (Cu, Fe, Mn, Mo and P) that sometimes brings them closer to plant roots.[9]

In different soil classification systems

The term Podzols is used in the World Reference Base for Soil Resources[14] (WRB) and in many national soil classification systems (in some of them, spelled Podsols).

See also

References

  • Dimbleby GW (1962). The development of British heathlands and their soils. Oxford Forestry Memoirs 23.
  1. ^ Podzols by Otto Spaargaren in Encyclopedia of Soil Science, pp. 580-582
  2. ^ Докучаев В. В. О подзоле Смоленской губернии // Труды Санкт-Петербургского общества естествоиспытателей. 1875. T. 6. Отд. минерал. и геол. Протоколы. С. XXI—XXII.
  3. ^ Докучаев В. В. О подзоле // Труды Императорского Вольного экономического общества. 1880. T. 1. Вып. 2. С. 142—150.
  4. ^ Rode A. A. To the problem of the degree of podzolization of soils // Studies in the genesis and geography of soils. M.: Acad. Sci. USSR, 1935. P. 55-70.
  5. ^ Chesworth, W. (Eds.), 2008. Encyclopedia of soil science, The Netherlands.
  6. ^ Spaargaren, Otto. Podzols. Encyclopedia of Soil Science, pp. 580–581.
  7. ^ Gerding, Victor; Thiers, Oscar (2002), "Characterization of soils of Nothofagus betuloides (Mirb) Blume forests, in Tierra del Fuego, Chile", Revista chilena de historia natural (in Spanish), 75 (4): 819–833, doi:10.4067/S0716-078X2002000400015
  8. ^ a b C., Park, Chris. A dictionary of environment and conservation. Allaby, Michael (3rd ed.). [Oxford]. ISBN 9780191826320. OCLC 970401188.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Fritz., Scheffer (2010). Lehrbuch der Bodenkunde. Schachtschabel, Paul., Blume, Hans-Peter (16. Aufl ed.). Heidelberg: Spektrum, Akad. Verl. ISBN 9783827414441. OCLC 506415938.
  10. ^ a b c d e Lundström, U.S; Van Breemen, N.; Bain, D. (2000-02-01). "The podzolization process. A review". Geoderma. 94 (2–4): 91–107. Bibcode:2000Geode..94...91L. doi:10.1016/S0016-7061(99)00036-1. ISSN 0016-7061.
  11. ^ a b c Sanborn, Paul; Lamontagne, Luc; Hendershot, William (2011-01-01). "Podzolic soils of Canada: Genesis, distribution, and classification". Canadian Journal of Soil Science. 91 (5): 843–880. doi:10.4141/cjss10024. ISSN 0008-4271.
  12. ^ Buurman, P.; Jongmans, A.G. (2005-03-01). "Podzolisation and soil organic matter dynamics". Geoderma. 125 (1–2): 71–83. Bibcode:2005Geode.125...71B. doi:10.1016/j.geoderma.2004.07.006. ISSN 0016-7061.
  13. ^ Fekiacova, Z.; Vermeire, M.L.; Bechon, L.; Cornelis, J.T.; Cornu, S. (2017-06-15). "Can Fe isotope fractionations trace the pedogenetic mechanisms involved in podzolization?". Geoderma. 296: 38–46. Bibcode:2017Geode.296...38F. doi:10.1016/j.geoderma.2017.02.020. ISSN 0016-7061.
  14. ^ IUSS Working Group WRB (2022). "World Reference Base for Soil Resources, fourth edition". International Union of Soil Sciences, Vienna. Retrieved 2022-10-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  15. ^ "Keys to Soil Taxonomy 2014". from the original on 2018-11-28. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
  16. ^ Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences (2001). Chinese Soil Taxonomy. Science Press, Beijing, New York.
  17. ^ "Spodosols". geo.msu.edu. from the original on 2018-03-30. Retrieved 2018-05-04.
  18. ^ "Podzolic - Soils of Canada". www.soilsofcanada.ca. from the original on 2018-04-22. Retrieved 2018-05-07.
  19. ^ Canadian Agricultural Services Coordinating Committee. Soil Classification Working Group (1998). The Canadian system of soil classification (3rd ed.). Ottawa: NRC Research Press. ISBN 978-0585119052. OCLC 44961488.
  20. ^ R.F. Isbell and the National Committee on Soil and Terrain (2016). "Australian Soil Classification, second edition (as Online Interactive Key)". CSIRO. from the original on 29 February 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
  21. ^ dos Santos, Humberto Gonçalves; et al. (2018). Sistema Brasileira de Classificação de Solos, quinta edição. Embrapa, Brasilia.

Further reading

  • W. Zech, P. Schad, G. Hintermaier-Erhard: Soils of the World. Springer, Berlin 2022, Chapter 3.3.3. ISBN 978-3-540-30460-9

External links

podzol, soil, science, podzols, typical, soils, coniferous, boreal, forests, also, typical, soils, eucalypt, forests, heathlands, southern, australia, western, europe, podzols, develop, heathland, which, often, construct, human, interference, through, grazing,. In soil science podzols are the typical soils of coniferous or boreal forests and also the typical soils of eucalypt forests and heathlands in southern Australia In Western Europe podzols develop on heathland which is often a construct of human interference through grazing and burning In some British moorlands with podzolic soils cambisols are preserved under Bronze Age barrows Dimbleby 1962 PodzolPodsol Podosol Spodosol EspodossoloThe picture is of a stagnic podzol in upland Wales and shows the typical sequence of organic topsoil with leached grey white subsoil with iron rich horizon below This example has two weak ironpans Used inWRB USDA soil taxonomy othersWRB codePZProfileO Ah EBhsCKey processpodzolizationParent materialquartz rich debris and sedimentClimatehumid continental subarctic oceanic equatorialH common O always has humified organic matter mixed with minerals A absent in most boreal podzols 1 E common is ashen grey and leached in Fe and AlB always receives Fe and Al through illuviation C common Contents 1 Term 2 Characteristics 3 Geographic distribution 4 Podzolization 4 1 Preconditions 4 2 Key steps 5 In different soil classification systems 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksTerm EditPodzol means under ash and is derived from the Russian pod pod zola zola the full form is podzo listaya po chva podzolistaya pochva under ashed soil The term was first given in middle of 1875 by Vasily Dokuchaev 2 3 It refers to the common experience of Russian peasants of plowing up an apparent under layer of ash leached or E horizon during first plowing of a virgin soil of this type 4 Characteristics EditPodzols can occur on almost any parent material but generally derive from either quartz rich sands and sandstone or sedimentary debris from magmatic rocks provided there is high precipitation 5 Most Podzols are poor soils for agriculture due to the sandy portion resulting in a low level of moisture and nutrients Some are sandy and excessively drained Others have shallow rooting zones and poor drainage due to subsoil cementation A low pH further compounds issues along with phosphate deficiencies and aluminum toxicity The best agricultural use of Podzols is for grazing although well drained loamy types can be very productive for crops if lime and fertilizer are used The E horizon or Ae in Canadian soil classification system which is usually 4 to 8 centimetres 1 6 to 3 1 in thick is low in Fe and Al oxides and humus It is formed under moist cool and acidic conditions especially where the parent material such as granite or sandstone is rich in quartz It is found under a layer of organic material in the process of decomposition which is usually 5 to 10 centimetres 2 0 to 3 9 in thick In the middle there is often a thin horizon of 0 5 to 1 centimetre 0 2 to 0 4 in The bleached soil horizon which always has a higher value than the horizons above and below it goes over into a red or red brown horizon so called Podzolic B The colour is strongest in the upper part and change at a depth of 50 to 100 centimetres 20 to 40 in progressively to the part of the soil that is mainly not affected by processes that is the parent material The soil profiles are designated by the letters A topsoil E eluviated soil B subsoil and C parent material In some Podzols the E horizon is absent either masked by biological activity or obliterated by disturbance Podzols with little or no E horizon development are often classified as brown Podzolic soils also called Umbrisols or Umbrepts Geographic distribution Edit Distribution of Podzol soils according to the World Reference Base for Soil Resources classification Dominant more than 50 of soil cover Codominant 25 50 Associated 5 25 Podzols cover about 4 850 000 square kilometres 1 870 000 sq mi worldwide and are usually found under sclerophyllous woody vegetation By extent Podzols are most common in temperate and boreal zones of the Northern Hemisphere but they can also be found in other settings including both temperate rainforests and tropical areas 6 In South America Podzols occur beneath Nothofagus betuloides forests in Tierra del Fuego 7 Podzolization Edit A Podzol with a characteristic eluvial bleached ash colored horizon and intensely coloured illuvial horizons The photo was taken in the Feldberg area Southern Black Forest Germany Podzolization or Podsolization 8 is complex soil formation process by which dissolved organic matter and ions of iron and aluminium released through weathering of various minerals form organo mineral complexes chelates and are moved from the upper parts of the soil profile and deposit in the deeper parts of soil Through this process the eluvial horizon becomes bleached and of ash grey colour The complexes move with percolating water further down to illuviated horizons which are commonly coloured brown red or black as they accumulate and consist of cemented sesquioxides and or organic compounds The podzolization is a typical soil formation process in Podzols 9 8 Preconditions Edit Podzolization usually occurs under forest or heath vegetation and is common in cool and humid climates as these climates inhibit the activity of soil microbes in the topsoil Overall podzolization happens where the decomposition of organic matter is inhibited and as a result acidic organic surface mor layers build up Under these typically acidic conditions nutrient deficiency further hampers the microbial degradation of organic complexing agents 9 10 Medium to coarse textured soils with base poor parent material usually rich in quartz also promote podzolization as they encourage percolating water flow 11 10 Key steps Edit A conceptualization of the process of podzolization in a typical Podzol The soil forming process of podzolization can be broken down into two main steps Mobilization and translocation of organic matter Fe and Al from the surface horizon and Immobilization and stabilization of organic matter Fe and Al into the subsoil 12 10 13 In the topsoil of acidic soils organic matter mostly from plant litter the humus layer and root exudates together with Al and Fe ions form organo mineral complexes These soluble chelates then relocate with percolating water from the A or E horizon to the B horizon As a result of this the E horizon or Ae horizon in the Canadian system of soil classification is left bleached and ash grey in colour while the B horizon becomes enriched with relocated organo mineral complexes The colour of B horizon is consequently red brown or black depending on the dominance of metal ions or organic matter Usually the boundary between the B and eluvial Ae or E horizon is very distinct and sometimes a hardpan or Ortstein 11 can form as the relocated Fe and Al and organic matter increase mineral particles cementing them into this compacted layer 11 9 10 There are several reasons why these organo mineral complexes immobilize in the B horizon If during the eluviation process more Al or Fe ions bind to the organic compounds the complex can flocculate as the solubility of it decreases with increasing metal to carbon ratio Apart from that a higher pH or higher Ca content in the lower soil horizons can result in the breakdown of metal humus complexes In the lower soil layers the organic complexing agents can be degraded by functioning microorganisms Already established complexes in the B horizon can act as a filter as they adsorb the traveling complexes from the upper soil horizons A decreased water conductivity due to higher clay content can also result in the early flocculation of organo mineral complexes 9 10 The relocated substances can sometimes separate in the illuvial horizons Then organic substances are mostly enriched in the uppermost part of the illuvial horizon whereas Fe and Al oxides are mostly found in the lower parts of the illuvial horizon 9 Podzolization also promotes the relocation of some nutrients Cu Fe Mn Mo and P that sometimes brings them closer to plant roots 9 In different soil classification systems EditThe term Podzols is used in the World Reference Base for Soil Resources 14 WRB and in many national soil classification systems in some of them spelled Podsols The USDA soil taxonomy 15 and the Chinese soil taxonomy 16 call these soils Spodosols 17 The Canadian system of soil classification matches Podzols with soils under the Podzolic order e g Humo Ferric Podzol 18 19 The Australian Soil Classification 20 uses the term Podosols The Brazilian Soil Classification System 21 calls them Espodossolos See also EditSoil typeReferences EditDimbleby GW 1962 The development of British heathlands and their soils Oxford Forestry Memoirs 23 Podzols by Otto Spaargaren in Encyclopedia of Soil Science pp 580 582 Dokuchaev V V O podzole Smolenskoj gubernii Trudy Sankt Peterburgskogo obshestva estestvoispytatelej 1875 T 6 Otd mineral i geol Protokoly S XXI XXII Dokuchaev V V O podzole Trudy Imperatorskogo Volnogo ekonomicheskogo obshestva 1880 T 1 Vyp 2 S 142 150 Rode A A To the problem of the degree of podzolization of soils Studies in the genesis and geography of soils M Acad Sci USSR 1935 P 55 70 Chesworth W Eds 2008 Encyclopedia of soil science The Netherlands Spaargaren Otto Podzols Encyclopedia of Soil Science pp 580 581 Gerding Victor Thiers Oscar 2002 Characterization of soils of Nothofagus betuloides Mirb Blume forests in Tierra del Fuego Chile Revista chilena de historia natural in Spanish 75 4 819 833 doi 10 4067 S0716 078X2002000400015 a b C Park Chris A dictionary of environment and conservation Allaby Michael 3rd ed Oxford ISBN 9780191826320 OCLC 970401188 a b c d e f Fritz Scheffer 2010 Lehrbuch der Bodenkunde Schachtschabel Paul Blume Hans Peter 16 Aufl ed Heidelberg Spektrum Akad Verl ISBN 9783827414441 OCLC 506415938 a b c d e Lundstrom U S Van Breemen N Bain D 2000 02 01 The podzolization process A review Geoderma 94 2 4 91 107 Bibcode 2000Geode 94 91L doi 10 1016 S0016 7061 99 00036 1 ISSN 0016 7061 a b c Sanborn Paul Lamontagne Luc Hendershot William 2011 01 01 Podzolic soils of Canada Genesis distribution and classification Canadian Journal of Soil Science 91 5 843 880 doi 10 4141 cjss10024 ISSN 0008 4271 Buurman P Jongmans A G 2005 03 01 Podzolisation and soil organic matter dynamics Geoderma 125 1 2 71 83 Bibcode 2005Geode 125 71B doi 10 1016 j geoderma 2004 07 006 ISSN 0016 7061 Fekiacova Z Vermeire M L Bechon L Cornelis J T Cornu S 2017 06 15 Can Fe isotope fractionations trace the pedogenetic mechanisms involved in podzolization Geoderma 296 38 46 Bibcode 2017Geode 296 38F doi 10 1016 j geoderma 2017 02 020 ISSN 0016 7061 IUSS Working Group WRB 2022 World Reference Base for Soil Resources fourth edition International Union of Soil Sciences Vienna Retrieved 2022 10 16 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Keys to Soil Taxonomy 2014 Archived from the original on 2018 11 28 Retrieved 2018 11 27 Institute of Soil Science Chinese Academy of Sciences 2001 Chinese Soil Taxonomy Science Press Beijing New York Spodosols geo msu edu Archived from the original on 2018 03 30 Retrieved 2018 05 04 Podzolic Soils of Canada www soilsofcanada ca Archived from the original on 2018 04 22 Retrieved 2018 05 07 Canadian Agricultural Services Coordinating Committee Soil Classification Working Group 1998 The Canadian system of soil classification 3rd ed Ottawa NRC Research Press ISBN 978 0585119052 OCLC 44961488 R F Isbell and the National Committee on Soil and Terrain 2016 Australian Soil Classification second edition as Online Interactive Key CSIRO Archived from the original on 29 February 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2016 dos Santos Humberto Goncalves et al 2018 Sistema Brasileira de Classificacao de Solos quinta edicao Embrapa Brasilia Further reading EditW Zech P Schad G Hintermaier Erhard Soils of the World Springer Berlin 2022 Chapter 3 3 3 ISBN 978 3 540 30460 9External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Podsol Spodosols USDA NRCS Archived from the original on 2006 05 09 Retrieved 2006 05 14 dead link Spodosols University of Florida Archived from the original on September 18 2004 Retrieved 2006 05 14 Spodosols University of Idaho Archived from the original on 2006 03 27 Retrieved 2006 05 14 The Podzolic Order Podzol http classification soilweb ca podzol http edafologia ugr es revista tomo9b a107text pdf http www bauing uni wuppertal de boden downloads save Podsol Boden 20des 20Jahres 2007 JPNSS pdf permanent dead link profile photos with classification WRB homepage profile photos with classification IUSS World of Soils Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Podzol amp oldid 1121508680, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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