Clay minerals and K feldspars were evaluated as sources of K in a Norway spruce stand (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) from the Skogaby experimental forest in southwest Sweden. The soil, developed in a Quaternary glacial till, has only 3–5% clay, and more than 95% of its K resides in feldspars. Ratios of K/Rb were assessed in interlayers of 2:1 clay minerals (extracted with hot (100 °C) 2 M HCl), biomass and the forest floor. These compartments had similarly low K/Rb ratios, whereas K feldspars were significantly poorer in Rb. A fractionation model indicated preferential retention of Rb in the biomass and forest floor, due to stronger adsorption of Rb than K in the humus, as well as preferential uptake of K from the exchange complex in the mineral soil. Preferential uptake of K may result from weaker adsorption of K by the cation exchanger, or preference for dissolved K over Rb by the roots. A quantitative mineralogical analysis revealed that loss from micas may account for half of the Holocene loss of K from the soil, which was approximately 22 Mg ha−1. Exceptionally low K/Rb ratios in HCl extracts of the upper 60 cm of the profile indicated extensive loss of K from mica in the parent material and re-fixation of K and Rb at lower ratios. The results indicate that fixation in and release from clay minerals may be prominent in the cycling of K, even in a soil that is poor in clay minerals.
CITATION STYLE
Simonsson, M., Court, M., Bergholm, J., Lemarchand, D., & Hillier, S. (2016). Mineralogy and biogeochemistry of potassium in the Skogaby experimental forest, southwest Sweden: pools, fluxes and K/Rb ratios in soil and biomass. Biogeochemistry, 131(1–2), 77–102. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-016-0266-9
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.