Variations in soil chemical and physical properties explain basin-wide Amazon forest soil carbon concentrations
Date
2020-02-11Author
Quesada, Carlos Alberto
Paz, Claudia
Mendoza, Erick Oblitas
Phillips, Oliver Lawrence
Saiz, Gustavo
Lloyd, Jon
Publisher
SOILDescription
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
We investigate the edaphic, mineralogical and climatic controls of soil organic carbon (SOC) concentration utilising data from 147 primary forest soils (0–30 cm depth) sampled in eight different countries across
the Amazon Basin. Sampled across 14 different World Reference Base soil groups, our data suggest that stabilisation mechanism varies with pedogenetic level. Specifically, although SOC concentrations in Ferralsols and
Acrisols were best explained by simple variations in clay content – this presumably being due to their relatively
uniform kaolinitic mineralogy – this was not the case for less weathered soils such as Alisols, Cambisols and
Plinthosols for which interactions between Al species, soil pH and litter quality are argued to be much more
important. Although for more strongly weathered soils the majority of SOC is located within the aggregate fraction, for the less weathered soils most of the SOC is located within the silt and clay fractions. It thus seems that
for highly weathered soils SOC storage is mostly influenced by surface area variations arising from clay content,
with physical protection inside aggregates rendering an additional level of protection against decomposition. On
the other hand, most of the SOC in less weathered soils is associated with the precipitation of aluminium–carbon
complexes within the fine soil fraction, with this mechanism enhanced by the presence of high levels of aromatic,
carboxyl-rich organic matter compounds. Also examined as part of this study were a relatively small number of
arenic soils (viz. Arenosols and Podzols) for which there was a small but significant influence of clay and silt
content variations on SOM storage, with fractionation studies showing that particulate organic matter may account for up to 0.60 of arenic soil SOC. In contrast to what were in all cases strong influences of soil and/or
litter quality properties, after accounting for these effects neither wood productivity, above-ground biomass nor
precipitation/temperature variations were found to exert any significant influence on SOC stocks. These results
have important implications for our understanding of how Amazon forest soils are likely to respond to ongoing
and future climate changes.