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Soil Research Soil Research Society
Soil, land care and environmental research
Soil Research

Soil Research

Volume 57 Number 3 2019

SR18331Agriculture changes soil properties on the Galápagos Islands – two case studies

Martin H. Gerzabek 0000-0002-3307-8416, Armin Bajraktarevic, Katharina Keiblinger 0000-0003-4668-3866, Axel Mentler, Maria Rechberger, Johannes Tintner, Karin Wriessnig, Michael Gartner, Xavier Salazar Valenzuela, Alexandra Troya, Paulina M. Couenberg, Heinke Jäger, Jorge E. Carrión and Franz Zehetner
pp. 201-214

This paper describes the impact of agricultural management on soil properties on the Galápagos archipelago by comparing arable soils on two islands with the adjacent soils in the national park on identical lava flows. Soil organic carbon stocks, nitrogen, mobile macro- and micronutrients, and microbial parameters changed considerably due to conversion to agriculture. Microbial parameters indicate changes in the nitrogen cycle and impact of fungicides and insecticides found in the arable plots.


The effect of land cover change on soil aggregation and soil organic carbon in complex landscapes is not well understood. We investigated soil organic carbon saturation deficit, soil aggregation and soil fraction associated carbon in two adjacent catchments (tussocks/shrubs and pine forest). Our findings show that physical and chemical soil characteristics are important drivers in such a complex landscape and may have masked the effect of recent vegetation change on soil aggregation and soil fraction associated C.


A single application of manure at 20 t ha–1 or equivalent fertiliser three years prior had limited long-term effects on soil microbial communities in a cropping field. Differences in community structure and diversity were overwhelmingly due to their depth in the soil profile, not the treatments applied. The strength and timing of amendment application was insufficient to affect microbial communities long-term.

SR18354Plant available water in saline soils – revisited

C. D. Grant 0000-0002-4191-1893 and P. H. Groenevelt
pp. 239-246

Plant breeders and yield-modellers need new ways to calculate the effects of salt on soil water availability. We present two new and completely different functions to attenuate the differential water capacity (one based in theory, the other in logic alone), plus a plant-sensitivity coefficient, to allow flexibility in determining how much saline water different plants can extract from different soils.

SR18207Predicting nitrogen mineralisation in Australian irrigated cotton cropping systems

Richard Brackin 0000-0002-6899-5935, Scott Buckley, Rhys Pirie and Francois Visser
pp. 247-256

Cotton cropping systems in Australia have poor nitrogen use efficiency. Mineralisation of soil nitrogen contributes to crop nutrition, but accurate quantification is time consuming. Using incubations and in-field measurements, we investigated potential indicators for their capacity to estimate nitrogen mineralisation in Australian vertisols. We found that both soil total nitrogen and total organic carbon can be used to provide rough estimates.


Interest in crop stover harvest for bioenergy production is rising in the Pampas of Argentina. In many soils, the impact of stover harvest on soil organic carbon will be small; however, not more than 30% of stover should be removed to avoid soil fertility depletion. Farmers may offset these stover harvest effects on soils by increasing the proportion of cereals in rotations and applying technological improvements.

SR17336Combined effect of intercropping and minimum tillage on soil carbon sequestration and organic matter pools in the semiarid region of Brazil

Stoécio Malta Ferreira Maia 0000-0001-6491-2517, Adriana Tamie Otutumi, Eduardo de Sá Mendonça, Júlio César Lima Neves and Teógenes Senna de Oliveira
pp. 266-275

The association of intercropping systems with minimum soil tillage, was shown to be a sustainable form of soil management to preserve soil organic matter, soil carbon stocks and to maintain soil quality in the semiarid region of Brazil.

SR18323Prediction of soil organic matter using an inexpensive colour sensor in arid and semiarid areas of Iran

Maryam Raeesi, Ali Asghar Zolfaghari 0000-0001-7337-9849, Mohammad Reza Yazdani, Manouchehr Gorji and Marmar Sabetizade
pp. 276-286

In this study nonlinear random forest and linear regressions were conducted to predict soil organic matter (SOM) using inexpensive NixTM pro colour sensor data in arid and semiarid areas of Iran. Results indicated that the accuracy of the nonlinear model in estimating SOM was better than that of the linear model. Results also illustrated that both linear and nonlinear models had higher accuracy in estimation of SOM in the semiarid area compared to arid area.

SR18300Urea and legume residues as 15N-N2O sources in a subtropical soil

J. Gomes, N. Brüggemann, D. P. Dick, G. M. Pedroso, M. Veloso and C. Bayer 0000-0001-8553-7330
pp. 287-293

Climate-smart soil management can help mitigate emissions of N2O, the most deleterious greenhouse gas. The impact of legume cover crops and urea on soil N2O emissions was examined and N2O sources were identified by 15N labelling. Although N-rich legume residues resulted in less marked emissions than urea, a combination of the two N sources provided no clear-cut environmental advantage.


This study investigated temperature sensitivity (Q10) of different biochars to better understand the Q10 of different soil carbon (C) pools. The Q10s of treatments with biochars, C skeletons and sugarcane residue were negatively correlated with the dissolved organic matter and microbial enzyme activities. The results should aid understanding of the Q10 of C pools in soil in the framework of climate change.

SR18301Mechanisms of potassium release from calcareous soils to different salt, organic acid and inorganic acid solutions

M. Najafi-Ghiri 0000-0003-0401-7566, M. Niazi, M. Khodabakhshi, H. R. Boostani and H. R. Owliaie
pp. 301-309

Mechanism of potassium (K) release by CaCl2 and HCl in calcareous soils was similar via exchange reaction, but organic acids released less K from K-bearing minerals during short-term extraction. However organic acids extracted more K during long-term extraction, possibly due to the dissolution of K-bearing minerals.

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