Role of Clay Mineralogy in the Stabilization of Soil Organic Carbon in Olive Groves under Contrasted Soil Management
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Soil organic matter Cover crops C sequestration Mediterranean soils SOC fractionation XRD
Fecha
2022-12-29Referencia bibliográfica
Calero, J... [et al.]. Role of Clay Mineralogy in the Stabilization of Soil Organic Carbon in Olive Groves under Contrasted Soil Management. Minerals 2023, 13, 60. [https://doi.org/10.3390/min13010060]
Patrocinador
PRIMA-H2020 project SUSTAINOLIVE 1811; Programa Operativo FEDER Andalucia 2014-2020 1261443Resumen
Cropland soils are key systems in global carbon budgets due to their high carbon-seques
tration potential. It is widely accepted that clays are one of the soil components that have a significant
effect on the stabilisation of soil organic carbon (SOC), owing to its surface interactions with organic
molecules. However, the identification of the direct effects of clays on SOC stabilization is complicated,
mainly due to the difficulty of accurately characterizing the mineralogy of clays, especially
phyllosilicates. In this study, the relationships between soil phyllosilicates and functional SOC pools
in woodlands and comparable olive groves, under two contrasting management systems (bare soils
versus soil under cover crops) and parent materials (calcareous and siliceous), were explored. The
total mineralogy of soil and clay fractions and the soil-clay assemblages were analysed through the
decomposition of X-ray diffraction patterns, and were then related to four SOC pools. Total and
unprotected SOC was higher in olive groves under cover crops, and this was true independent of
the parent material, proving the importance of herbaceous covers in SOC sequestration in woody
crops. Some significant correlations between clay minerals and SOC fractions were found. Interestingly,
mixed-layer content was correlated with the biochemically protected SOC fraction (r = 0.810,
p < 0.05), and this was so even when the partial correlation coefficient was calculated (r = 0.761,
p < 0.05). According to the partial correlation networks (PCN), four separated clusters of variables
were obtained, which joined into only one at fdr < 0.25. The PCNs supported the direct correlation
between mixed-layer content, especially those rich in smectite, and the biochemically protected SOC
fraction, suggesting that smectite layers may stabilize organic molecules. Since potassium enrichment
is higher in the rooted layers of woodland and soils under cover crops, and this increase is related to
the collapse of swelling layers, these soils were poorer in smectite phases than the bare soils. This
also would explain why the biochemically protected SOC was more abundant in the latter.





