Top Banner
Introduction to Soil Science Martin Šanda - B673 [email protected] • importance of soil, soil formation • soil substances, flow of water in soil • terminology, classification • economical evaluation of soils - BPEJ
52

Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Dec 02, 2021

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Introduction to Soil Science

Martin Šanda - [email protected]

• importance of soil, soil formation

• soil substances, flow of water in soil

• terminology, classification

• economical evaluation of soils - BPEJ

Page 2: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 3: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 4: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Ecological functions of soil

• Supports growth of plants and live of other organisms (phytoedaphon and zooedaphon)

• Recycles nutrients and exhausts

• Governs flow and purity of water

• Serves as building material

Page 5: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 6: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Minerals

• Up to 50% of soil volume

• Made of particles of different sizes

• Determine chemical reaction

• Originate from bedrock material

Page 7: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Clay minerals

• silica tetrahedron SiO4

one atom of Si is surrounded by 4 anions ofO2-

• create layer of tetrahedrons sharingO2-

Page 8: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Clay minerals

• aluminiumoctahedron

6 oxygens with Al3+

atom

• layer of octahedrons bound with sharedO2- or OH-

Page 9: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

� Products of weathering of rocks (secondaryminerals)

� Posses surface charge: attract ions, impactplasticity and adhesion of soil

Clay minerals

Page 10: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 11: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 12: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Pedogenetic factors

• Bedrock(determines properties of soils, important is ability of rock to weather)

• Topography (steepness, orientation, altitude)

• Climate (moisture and temperature, precipitation - rainfall)

• Organisms(determine creation and existence of soil)

• Time

Page 13: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 14: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 15: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Weatheringphysical

1. Frost

2. Irregular heating

3. Swelling - drying

4. Abrasion (water, wind, ice)

5. Root growth

Page 16: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

1. Hydratation

2. Hydrolysis

3. Dissolution

4. Carbonation

5. Complexation

6. Oxidation-reduction

All cases need water!!!

WeatheringChemical

Page 17: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Impact of organisms on the soil formation

• Vegetation–

• Microbes–

• Soil animals

• Humans

Type of rooting, leaf chemism, amount

Decomposition of the organic matter

- Building of pathways for water flow

Tillage, compaction, changes of the landscape – drainage, aplication of chemicals, pollution

Page 18: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 19: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

•intensiveagriculture

�fertilization�pesticides�toxic compounds•landfills•urbanization

•deserti-fication

•erosion

�forest clear-cutting

�agriculture

Human impact on soils

Page 20: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 21: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 22: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Soil texture and soil structureaggregates – spatial

composition

texture – %clay, silt, sand

determined, can not be changed

chemical bonds of humus units / clay minerals to other grains

can be changed (good/bad)

texture classes soil types

Page 23: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 24: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 25: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 26: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Soil structure

• primary spatial constellation of soil into clumps called aggregates or pedons

• binding factors are plant root (their excrements), organic matter and clay minerals,

• sandy and rocky soils do not create aggregates

• most important factor of aggregation is organicmatter

• stability of aggregate is their endurance towards breakdown under external impacts

Page 27: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Charakteristics of soil structure

• Type: Shape of aggregatescrumbs, blocky, prizmatic, platy..

• Size:– fine (microaggregates) <0.25 mm

– coarse (macroaggregates) >0.25 mm

• Degree of structure:– without st., weak st., highly developed st.

• General

– lots of clay���� strong structure, big blocks

– lots of organics���� crumby structure

Page 28: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

impact of roots on soil stability

Sulzman

Page 29: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 30: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 31: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Soil water• Necessary for plant growth• Basic medium for transport of

matter• Necessary for clean up of soil• Is found in soil as

– chemically bound andhygroscopic (grain wrap),

– capillary (capillary forces in pores)– gravitational (temporal, outflows after

cessation of the water source- rain, flood, snowmelt)

Dipoleextremely good solvent

Page 32: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 33: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 34: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Saturated flow

Darcy, H., 1856. Les Fountaines de la Ville de Dijon

Henry Darcy (1856) solved the filtration

problem for fountains in Dijon.

He found that flow of water through the

column of sand is dependent:

•proportionally to the difference of hydrostatic pressure at the ends of the column

•improportionally to the length of the column

•proportionally to the cross-section of the column

• depends on the coefficient for the given material

Henry Darcy

Page 35: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Hydraulic conductivity

- is the Darcian coefficient of the material called:

saturated hydraulic conductivity

Darcy law is then

v = Ks * i (m/s)

v – velocity of flow

Ks – saturated hydraulic conductivity (m/s)

i – hydraulic gradient (i = h/L)

Page 36: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Classification of soils:

• aiming to organize knowledge in the relation of soil genesis and soil properties

• World Reference Base - FAO/UNESCO Legend of the Soil Map of the World

-diagnostic horizons

-diagnostic properties

-diagnostic materials

• also each country has its onwn system of soil types

http://www.fao.org/documents/show_cdr.asp?url_file=/docrep/W8594E/W8594E00.htm

Page 37: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

FAO – System defines:

Reference soil groups – main pedogenetic process, identification of dominant soil horizon: ending mostly with with –solHISTOSOLS (HS), CRYOSOLS (CR), ANTHROSOLS (AT), LEPTOSOLS(LP), VERTISOLS (VR), FLUVISOLS (FL), SOLONCHAKS (SC), GLEYSOLS (GL), ANDOSOLS (AN), PODZOLS (PZ), PLINTHOSOLS (PT), FERRALSOLS (FR), SOLONETZ (SN), PLANOSOLS (PL), CHERNOZEMS (CH), KASTANOZEMS (KS), PHAEOZEMS (PH), GYPSISOLS (GY), DURISOLS (DU), CALCISOLS (CL), ALBELUVISOLS (AB), ALISOLS (AL), NITISOLS (NT), ACRISOLS (AC), LUVISOLS (LV), LIXISOLS (LX), UMBRISOLS (UM)CAMBISOLS (CM), ARENOSOLS (AR), REGOSOLS (RG)

Varietes – adjective codes: identification acc. e.g. to chemical properties

examples:

ab Albic cc Calcic dy Dystric

fr Ferric gy Gypsic hu Humic

rz Rendzic sk Skeletic vi Vitric

Page 38: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Chernozem

Page 39: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 40: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 41: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Cambisol

http://edafologia.ugr.es/

Page 42: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Cambisol

http://edafologia.ugr.es/

Page 43: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Gley

Page 44: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Lithosol rendzic Lithosol

Page 45: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Histosol (peat)

Page 46: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 47: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

European soil regions

Page 48: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

Soil bonity

•classification of soils based of the production ability

•in CR - BPEJ –bonitated soil ecological units

Page 49: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

BPEJ5 digit code

1. digit – characteristics of the climate region

2. a 3. digit – main soil unit reference + soil texture,..

4. digit – combination of decline and expozition

5. digit –combination of the depth and amount of stones

Page 50: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

BPEJaccording to the production ability

1) typical arable soils

2) conditionally arable soils and grass fields

3) permanent grass fields

4) soils not suitable for agriculture production

Page 51: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz
Page 52: Introduction to Soil Science - cvut.cz

ReferencesKutílek, M., Kuráž, V., Císlerová, M. Hydropedologie, skriptum ČVUT 1994

Soil Science and Soil Physics, ČVUT, 2015http://storm.fsv.cvut.cz/pro-studenty/predmety/volitelne-predmety/soil-science-and-soil-

physics/Request password at [email protected]

Fitzpatrick, Soils: Their formation, classification and distribution

Sulzman E.W. : CSS 305 Principles of Soil Science: http://cropandsoil.oregonstate.edu/classes/css305/lecture sched.html

Departamento de Edafología y Química, Agrícola Universidad de Granada, EspañaUnidad docente e investigadora de la Facultad de Ciencias http://edafologia.ugr.es/

Tomášek, M. Atlas půd České republiky, ČGÚ 1995.

http://eusoils.jrc.it/Data.html Soil & Waste Unit, European Communities – soil maps

FAO World reference base for soil resources http://www.fao.org/soils-portal/soil-survey/soil-classification/world-reference-base/en/