Title of article :
Organic matter bound to mineral surfaces: Resistance to chemical and biological oxidation
Author/Authors :
Mikutta، نويسنده , , Robert and Kaiser، نويسنده , , Klaus، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
Understanding the turnover of organic matter (OM) in soils necessitates information on biological stability and ecological functions. For easy characterization of slowly cycling OM, treatments using oxidants such as sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) have been applied. The rationale for that approach is, however, questionable and concerns exist to which extent abiotic oxidation can mimic biological mineralization. Here we compare biological mineralization of mineral-bound OM to its resistance to chemical oxidation by 6 mass% NaOCl. Water-extractable OM, sorbed to goethite, vermiculite, and pyrophyllite at pH 4.0 and in different background electrolytes (CaCl2, NaCl, NaCl–NaH2PO4) to favor or exclude certain binding mechanisms, was subsequently subjected to NaOCl treatment (pH 7, either for 18 or 6 × 6 h). Irrespective of mineral surface properties and mechanisms involved in OM sorption, NaOCl removed a constant portion of the sorbed OC. More OC survived when bound to goethite than to vermiculite, thus confirming previous results on the increase of oxidation-resistant OC with increasing Fe and Al (hydr)oxide contents in different soils. Mineralizable OC (within 90 days) was much smaller than the NaOCl-removable OC and both fractions were negatively correlated (r2 = 0.90 for the 18 h treatment; r2 = 0.86 for the 6 × 6 h treatment), suggesting that chemically oxidizable OM does not represent the portion of sorbed OM available to biological consumption.
Keywords :
NaOCl , Wet oxidation , Passive organic matter pool , Stabilization , Organic matter , Stable organic matter , Sodium hypochlorite
Journal title :
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
Journal title :
Soil Biology and Biochemistry