Pools and composition of soils in the alpine zone of the Tatra Mountains

J. Kopáček,J. Kaňa,H. Šantrůčková

Published 2006 in Biologia

ABSTRACT

The basic physical, chemical, and biochemical properties of mountain soils were determined in alpine-zone meadow and moraine areas of the Tatra Mountains (Slovakia, Poland) in 2000–2001. The amount of soil (dry weight soil < 2 mm) varied from 38 to 255 kg m−2 (average of 121 kg m−2) in alpine meadows and averaged 13 kg m−2 in moraine areas. Concentration of organic C was the parameter that most strongly and positively correlated with N, P, S, effective cation exchange capacity (CEC), exchangeable base cations, exchangeable acidity, and all biochemical parameters (C, N, and P in microbial biomass and C mineralisation rates). The relationship between C and P was less straightforward due to inorganic P forms associated with Fe and Al oxides. The average pools of C, N, P, and S, were respectively 696, 41, 2.9, and 1.9 mol m−2 (i.e., 84, 5.7, 0.91 and 0.61 t ha−1) in meadow soils, and 38, 2.1, 0.45 and 0.12 mol m−2 (i.e., 4.5, 0.30, 0.14 and 0.04 t ha−1) in moraine areas. Soil pH was generally low, with the lowest pHH2O values (3.8–4.9) in the A-horizons. Average pools of CEC were 12 and 0.7 eq m−2 in meadows and moraine areas, respectively. The base saturation (BS) was 4–45% (12% on average) of CEC, and was primarily based on Ca2+ and K+ (∼40% and ∼22% of BS, respectively). C:N molar ratios (14–20) were only slightly lower than those observed in the alpine Tatra Mountain zone ∼40 years ago. Concentrations of C, N, and P in soil microbial biomass were high (on average 1.6, 3.4, and 25% of total C, N, and P concentrations), suggesting high microbial activity in alpine soils.

PUBLICATION RECORD

CITATION MAP

EXTRACTION MAP

CLAIMS

  • No claims are published for this paper.

CONCEPTS

  • No concepts are published for this paper.

REFERENCES

Showing 1-24 of 24 references · Page 1 of 1

CITED BY

Showing 1-18 of 18 citing papers · Page 1 of 1