Carbonate profile of soils of chestnut solonetz complexes and its anthropogenic transformation in arable land

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Abstract

Information on the general structure of soil profiles and, in particular, on the carbonate profile of natural soils and their transformation under anthropogenic influences under arable conditions in the dry steppe zone is systematized. The objects of the study were chestnut solonetz associations in the south of the Volga Upland and the northern part of the Ergeni Upland in the Volgograd region on rain-fed and irrigated arable land. Three directions of anthropogenic transformation of the carbonate profile of soils in chestnut solonetz associations have been noted: (1) the preservation of the original eluvial-accumulative profile with effervescence under HCl application from a certain depth; (2) the formation of profile-effervescent soils, starting from the day surface; (3) the formation of complex-effervescent soils with alternating horizons containing and not containing carbonates. Six known mechanisms of carbonate accumulation in arable soils of the dry steppe are systematized and a key-determinant for field diagnostics of their combinations in a specific soil is proposed based on a morphological analysis of the soil profile and the current external conditions of its functioning. A diagram of the anthropogenic transformation of soils in chestnut solonetz associations has been compiled. A criterion has been formulated for assessing the anthropogenic transformation of soil cover on arable land in the dry steppe zone – the proportion of effervescent soils from the daytime surface is more than 20–30% of the area of an individual field or part of it. A field verification of the criterion was carried out on arable land with different land use histories and initial natural conditions on the territory of the experimental station “Oroshaemaya” in the Volgograd region.

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N. B. Khitrov

Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute

Author for correspondence.
Email: khitrovnb@gmail.com
ORCID iD: 0000-0001-5151-5109
Russian Federation, Moscow

N. G. Kruglyakova

Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute; All-Russian Research Institute of Irrigated Agriculture – branch of the Federal Scientific Center for Hydraulic Engineering and Land Reclamation named after A.N. Kostyakov

Email: khitrovnb@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow; Volgograd

I. N. Gorokhova

Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute

Email: khitrovnb@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow

E. I. Kravchenko

Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute

Email: khitrovnb@gmail.com
ORCID iD: 0000-0003-4609-5650
Russian Federation, Moscow

References

Supplementary files

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1. JATS XML
2. Fig. 1. Examples of profile distribution of humus (1) and calcium carbonate (CaCO3 equivalent) (2) content in soils of groups 1.1 and 1.2 that do not effervesce from the daylight surface. To the right of the graph are the indices of soil horizons of a specific profile. Soils: group 1.1: (a) – clayey-illuvial median effervescent agrozem, pit FR-020 (Luvic Kastanozem (Aric, Loamic)); (b) – median effervescent agro-chestnut soil, pit FR-016 (Haplic Kastanozem (Aric, Loamic)); (c) – median effervescent agrosolonetz, pit FR-025 (Haplic Solonetz (Aric, Loamic)); group 1.2: (d), (e) – accumulative-carbonate segregation agro-abraded high-boiling agrozems (Haplic Kastanozems (Aric, Loamic)); (d) – rank FR-022; (e) – rank FR-023.

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3. Fig. 2. Examples of profile distribution of humus (1) and calcium carbonate (CaCO3 equivalent) (2) content in soils of group 2.1 with effervescence along the entire profile, starting from the daylight surface. To the right of the graph are indices of soil horizons of a specific profile. Soils: Accumulative-carbonate segregational solonetzic agroabraded profile-effervescent agrozems (Haplic Kastanozems (Aric, Luvic, Protosodic)): (a) – pit FR-006, (b) – pit FR-026, (c) – pit FR-004, (d) – pit FR-021, (e) – pit FR-002, (f) – pit FR-019.

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4. Fig. 3. Examples of profile distribution of humus (1) and calcium carbonate (CaCO3 equivalent) (2) content in soils of group 2.2 with complex effervescence. To the right of the graph are the indices of soil horizons of a specific section. Soils: (a) – agro-dark-humus clay-illuvial carbonate-humus-stratified secondary-solonetzic complex-effervescent (Luvic Phaeozem (Aric, Loamic, Novic, Protosodic)), pit FR-003; (b) – clay-illuvial carbonate-humus-stratified complex effervescent agrozem (Haplic Kastanozem (Aric, Loamic, Novic), pit OP-03; (c) – agro-chestnut solonetzic carbonate-humus-stratified complex effervescent (Haplic Kastanozem (Aric, Loamic, Novic, Protosodic), pit OP-04.

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5. Fig. 4. Scheme of anthropogenic transformation of soil profiles of components of light-chestnut solonetz complexes. Horizons with continuous effervescence from HCl due to the presence of dispersed carbonates in them are shown in yellow fill. Horizons without fill do not contain carbonates. Horizon indices (capital letters): P – agrohumus (arable); BMK – xerometamorphic horizon; BCA – accumulative-carbonate horizon; BI – clayey-illuvial horizon; SN – solonetz horizon; RA – humus-stratified (washed or poured) horizon; B – middle horizon, which has no diagnostic value (its properties do not allow it to be identified as any diagnostic horizon); AB – lower part of the humus horizon, transitional to the middle ones; BC – horizon, transitional to the parent rock. Soil attribute indices (lower case letters): ca – presence of dispersed carbonates in the soil mass (continuous effervescence from HCl); mc – mycelial forms of carbonate neoplasms (veins, tubes); nc – segregation forms of carbonate neoplasms (white-eye, carbonate concretions, nodules); rh – humus-stratified (washed or poured material of small thickness). For simplicity, other soil attributes (solonetzic content, eluviation, etc.) are not included in the diagram. Red numbers indicate the legend positions (Table S4).

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6. Fig. 5. Field verification of the criterion of anthropogenic soil transformation based on effervescence from the surface in the fields of the experimental station “Oroshaya” – the share of carbonate soils from the surface (weak, medium and strong effervescence from HCl together): numbers in the center of the field contour – % of points with effervescence from the total number of points in the field; contour color – 10% intervals.

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7. SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS: Carbonate profile of soils of chestnut solonetz complexes and its anthropogenic transformation in arable land
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