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Keywords = pedofeatures

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13 pages, 3888 KB  
Article
Fungal Microfeatures in Topsoils Under Fairy Rings in Pyrenean Grasslands
by Lourdes M. Salazar, Maria Teresa Sebastià and Rosa M. Poch
Soil Syst. 2025, 9(3), 92; https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems9030092 - 25 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1032
Abstract
Soil reflects ecosystem processes and is influenced by gradual biospheric changes, which can affect its biotic components. In fairy rings, soil morphology, physicochemical properties, and biota are interconnected within a shared environmental space. In La Bertolina grasslands, while fungal and bacterial genomics have [...] Read more.
Soil reflects ecosystem processes and is influenced by gradual biospheric changes, which can affect its biotic components. In fairy rings, soil morphology, physicochemical properties, and biota are interconnected within a shared environmental space. In La Bertolina grasslands, while fungal and bacterial genomics have been investigated, the micromorphological soil effects of these rings have not. This study micromorphologically analyzed thin sections of three fairy rings at four zones: the ring center, the zone of peak growth in 2013 (R13), the predicted growth zone for 2019 (R19), and outside the ring. From each zone, two thin soil sections were prepared, totaling 24 samples. Fungal structures were exhaustively described according to morphological criteria following reference by multiple authors. The soil was a calcareous, loamy Regosol, and showed moderately developed crumb or laminar microstructures. Nine types of fungal structures were identified, consistent with genomic findings in the zone. Although fungal abundance did not vary across zones, mesofauna droppings were more frequent in R13 and R19, which was related to higher nutrient or water availability due to the fungal activity. Regarding the groundmass of the topsoil, neither the composition nor the microstructure of the surface horizons varied according to the moment of appearance of the ring at the sampled points. Full article
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26 pages, 37903 KB  
Article
Palaeoenvironmental Synthesis of the Eastern Ebro Basin Loess–Palaeosol Sequences (LPSs)
by Daniela Álvarez, Carlos Alberto Torres-Guerrero, Jaume Boixadera, Carles Balasch, José Manuel Plata, Rafael Rodríguez Ochoa, José Ramón Olarieta and Rosa M. Poch
Quaternary 2025, 8(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/quat8020025 - 12 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2012
Abstract
Loess–palaeosol sequences (LPSs) are continuous records of palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic conditions during the Quaternary. This study includes 17 LPS located in the NE of the Iberian Peninsula, irregularly distributed, associated with different river basins: the Ebro Basin, the Mora Basin, and the Ter [...] Read more.
Loess–palaeosol sequences (LPSs) are continuous records of palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic conditions during the Quaternary. This study includes 17 LPS located in the NE of the Iberian Peninsula, irregularly distributed, associated with different river basins: the Ebro Basin, the Mora Basin, and the Ter sub-basin. The soils developed on these loess deposits present a loam–sandy texture, coarser than the typical loess, ochre in colour, with variable thickness (1–12 m), calcareous composition (20–45% CaCO3 eq.), very low or null organic matter (OM), and basic pH. These deposits have been classified as desert LPS, whose pedogenesis is mainly associated with the redistribution of calcium carbonate and, in some cases, gypsum. Several methodologies have been applied to determine their mineralogical, physical, and chemical characteristics and date them by luminescence techniques. In addition, some relevant pedofeatures (porosity, CaCO3, gypsum, etc.) have been characterised in detail. The aims of the present study have been to know the pedogenic development of the LPS by defining the main soil-forming factors that have affected them in order to associate these factors with the characteristic palaeoclimatic and palaeoenvironmental conditions reported in this area over time and to improve the understanding of soil evolution. Full article
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12 pages, 1460 KB  
Article
Dynamics of Carbonates in Soils under Different Land Use in Forest-Steppe Area of Russia Using Stable and Radiogenic Carbon Isotope Data
by Olga Khokhlova and Tatyana Myakshina
Geosciences 2018, 8(4), 144; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences8040144 - 23 Apr 2018
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 4693
Abstract
The work is aimed at the analysis of carbonate dynamics in soils under different land use. The studied area is located in the forest steppe - of the Central Russian Upland. Soils were sampled at four sites: a broadleaf forest, an adjacent 50-year [...] Read more.
The work is aimed at the analysis of carbonate dynamics in soils under different land use. The studied area is located in the forest steppe - of the Central Russian Upland. Soils were sampled at four sites: a broadleaf forest, an adjacent 50-year continuously cropped field including plots under a corn monoculture, bare fallow, and a crop rotation area with a clean fallow every fourth year. The carbonates’ morphology, their chemical composition, as well as their stable and radiogenic isotopes of carbon were studied. Clear-cut distinctions were found in the carbonate distribution throughout the profiles in the microstructure of carbonate pedofeatures, carbon isotopic composition, and radiocarbon age of carbonates between the pairs of the plots as follows: the bare fallow and the crop rotation on the one hand, and the corn monoculture and forest on the other. The distinctions are commonly assumed to result from repeating upward water fluxes, which are different in the bare soils and those with plant cover. A clear difference occurred in the hydrothermal regime for soils with and without plant cover, and was found to be the key factor of the observed differences. In addition, in soils under plant cover, the carbonate migration upward occurs due to process of transpiration, whereas in soils devoid of plants, it occurs due to physical evaporation. Full article
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22 pages, 10268 KB  
Article
Soil Processes, Pedofeatures and Microscale Metal Distributions: Relevant Study of Contaminant-Dynamics Calls for Pedology-Based Soil-Depth Sampling Strategies
by Folkert Van OORT, Eddy Foy, Jérôme Labanowski, Sophie Leguédois and Toine Jongmans
Soil Syst. 2018, 2(1), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems2010017 - 14 Mar 2018
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 5699
Abstract
Short-term variations of soil conditions affect the form, mobility and bioavailability of metal pollutants. Released metals migrate toward depth where they are intercepted or precipitate, leading to variable spatial metal distribution patterns, at a macro-, meso- and microscale. Studies at a mesoscale give [...] Read more.
Short-term variations of soil conditions affect the form, mobility and bioavailability of metal pollutants. Released metals migrate toward depth where they are intercepted or precipitate, leading to variable spatial metal distribution patterns, at a macro-, meso- and microscale. Studies at a mesoscale give access to trace metal (TM) associations induced by pedological processes. Although scarcely documented, such meso-scale studies represent an essential step for relevant environmental risk assessment, halfway between field- and molecular-scale investigations. We argued for such approach by performing optical microscopy and micro-X-ray fluorescence on thin sections from two soils, contaminated either by industrial zinc-smelter waste or by urban wastewater. Consistent correlation between key indicators of pedological processes (Fe, Mn, and Ca) and trace metals (Zn, Pb, and Cu) on some 20 elemental maps of TM-hosting soil constituents and pedofeatures reveal distinct coinciding localizations, illustrating TM-accumulation via interception or (co)-precipitation processes. Micromorphological interpretation of characteristic pedofeatures in subsurface horizons (crystals, argillans, ferrans, and mangans) containing significant amounts of TM provide valuable insight into the contaminant dynamics in terms of lixiviation, colloidal transport, redox conditions, or fungal activity. Our mesoscale approach stresses the importance of pedology-based sampling strategies, instead of systematic soil-depth sampling, for soil contamination research in natural ecosystems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Soil Processes Controlling Contaminant Dynamics)
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