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Original Articles

Contribution of Soil Organic Carbon to the Ion Exchange Capacity of Tropical Soils

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Pages 439-462 | Published online: 11 Oct 2008
 

ABSTRACT

Highly weathered soils represent about 3 billion ha of the tropical region. Oxisols represent about 60% of the Brazilian territory (more than 5 million km2), in areas of great agricultural importance. Soil organic carbon (SOC) can be responsible for more than 80% of the cation exchange capacity (CEC) of highly weathered soils, such as Oxisols and Ultisols. The objective of this study was to estimate the contribution of the SOC to the CEC of Brazilian soils from different orders. Surface samples (0.0 to 0.2 m) of 30 uncultivated soils (13 Oxisols, 6 Ultisols, 5 Alfisols, 3 Entisols, 1 Histosol, 1 Inceptisol, and 1 Molisol), under native forests and from reforestation sites from São Paulo State, Brazil, were collected in order to obtain a large variation of (electro)chemical, physical, and mineralogical soil attributes. Total content of SOC was quantified by titulometric and colorimetric methods. Effective cation exchange capacity (ECEC) was obtained by two methods: the indirect method—summation—estimated the ECECi from the sum of basic cations (Ca+ Mg+ K+ Na) and exchangeable Al; and the direct ECECd obtained by the compulsive exchange method, using unbuffered BaCl2 solution. The contribution of SOC to the soil CEC was estimated by the Bennema statistical method. The amount of SOC varied from 6.6 g kg−1 to 213.4 g kg−1, while clay contents varied from 40 g kg−1 to 716 g kg−1. Soil organic carbon contents were strongly associated to the clay contents, suggesting that clay content was the primary variable in controling the variability of SOC contents in the samples. Cation exchange capacity varied from 7.0 mmolc kg−1 to 137.8 mmolc kg−1 and had a positive correlation with SOC. The mean contribution (per gram) of the SOC (1.64 mmolc) for the soil CEC was more than 44 times higher than the contribution of the clay fraction (0.04 mmolc). A regression model that considered the SOC content as the only significant variable explained 60% of the variation in the soil total CEC. The importance of SOC was related to soil pedogenetic process, since its contribution to the soil CEC was more evident in Oxisols with predominance of Fe and Al (oxihydr)oxides in the mineral fraction or in Ultisols, that presented illuviated clay. The influence of SOC in the sign and in the magnitude of the net charge of soils reinforce the importance of agricultural management systems that preserve high levels of SOC, in order to improve their sustainability.

This research was financially supported by FAPESP (process 02/00003–5 and 03/00192-5).

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