Title of article :
Properties, formation, and geo-ecological significance of organic soils in the coastal region of East Antarctica (Wilkes Land)
Author/Authors :
Beyer، نويسنده , , Lothar، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages :
15
From page :
79
To page :
93
Abstract :
The ice-free antarctic vegetation oases are characterized by specific soil patterns. Four organic soils from mosses in Wilkes Land close to the Australian Casey Station (latitude: 66°18′S, longitude: 110°32′E) are discussed with respect to soil formation, ecology, and distribution. A soil survey of the ice-free coastal landscape suggests that mosses are the main source of organic soils. The soil organic matter transformation pathways differ greatly despite the fact that carbon sources are mostly the same moss species. Humification rate is probably controlled by microclimatic and soil moisture regimes as well as by the microbial colonization, which influences the nitrogen dynamics. The soils are affected by mineral particle inputs from seabird influenced ice- and vegetation-free surfaces. Carbon-14 dating, carbon-13/carbon-12 isotopic ratios and detailed SOM investigations are recommended for future studies to improve our current understanding of SOM origin, accumulation, and transformation. The Von Post humification scale is not an adequate indicator for estimating humification in antarctic organic soils. Even small areas or percentages of organic soils strongly affect the carbon and nitrogen stocks at landscape scales.
Keywords :
East Antarctica , Organic soils , Gelisols , soil geography , Soil formation , humification
Journal title :
CATENA
Serial Year :
2000
Journal title :
CATENA
Record number :
2251660
Link To Document :
بازگشت