• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Changes in soil mineralogy and exchangeable cation pools in stands of Norway spruce planted on former pasture land
  • Contributor: Nordborg, Fredrik; Olsson, Siv
  • imprint: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999
  • Published in: Plant and Soil
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 0032-079X; 1573-5036
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <p>Chemical and mineralogical properties of the soils in 35-and 70-year-old stands of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst), planted on former pasture and were studied at Asa Experimental Forest, southern Sweden. Remnant deciduous forests bordering the spruce stands were used as controls to assess possible tree-species-related effects on soil development. All soils are acid with little difference in soil pH between the spruce and deciduous stands. However, the saturation of the exchange complex with Mg is lower beneath spruce and the total exchangeable Mg pool in the upper meter of these soils is one third of the Mg store beneath the deciduous stands. Amphibole, biotite and chlorite are the major sources of Mg in the parent soil. The clay fraction of the topsoil beneath spruce has been depleted of all these easily weatherable ferromagnesian minerals. Apart from weathering-resistant primary silicates, the clay fraction consists almost exclusively of expandable, smectitic mixedlayer minerals, which are believed to be the products of advanced stages of biotite weathering. In contrast, vermiculite is the dominant secondary mineral in the A-horizon in the deciduous stands, and some chlorite has survived. Moreover, a greater depth of in situ weathering is indicated for the soil of the old spruce stands where biotite/vermiculite mixed-layers have formed in the C-horizon as products of early stages of biotite weathering. Thus, differences between the paired sites in soil solution chemistry are supported by the qualitative differences in soil mineralogy, and are believed to reflect divergent biotic and/or abiotic processes in the different stand types.</p>