Search results for "ORGANIC MATTER"

showing 10 items of 577 documents

Effects of soil compaction, rain exposure and their interaction on soil carbon dioxide emission

2012

Soils release more carbon, primarily as carbon dioxide (CO2), per annum than current global anthropogenic emissions. Soils emit CO2 through mineralization and decomposition of organic matter and respiration of roots and soil organisms. Given this, the evaluation of the effects of abiotic factors on microbial activity is of major importance when considering the mitigation of greenhouse gases emissions. Previous studies demonstrate that soil CO2 emission is significantly affected by temperature and soil water content. A limited number of studies have illustrated the importance of bulk density and soil surface characteristics as a result of exposure to rain on CO2 emission, however, none exami…

chemistry.chemical_classificationGeography Planning and DevelopmentSoil scienceSoil classificationSoil carbonMineralization (soil science)Bulk densitySoil managementchemistrySoil waterEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Environmental scienceOrganic matterSoil fertilityEarth-Surface ProcessesEarth Surface Processes and Landforms
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Distinct and diverse anaerobic bacterial communities in boreal lakes dominated by candidate division OD1

2012

Lakes have a central role in the carbon cycle of the boreal landscape. These systems typically stratify in summer and their hypolimnetic microbial communities influence burial of biogenic organic matter in sediments. The composition of bacterial communities in these suboxic habitats was studied by pyrosequencing of 16S rRNA amplicons from five lakes with variable dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations. Bacterioplankton communities in the hypolimnetic waters were clearly different from the surface layer with candidate division OD1, Chlorobi and Bacteroidetes as dominant community members. Several operational taxonomic units (OTUs) affiliated with candidate division OD1 were abundant a…

chemistry.chemical_classificationGeomicrobiologyEcologyBiodiversityBacterioplanktonBiologyMicrobiologyCarbon cycleBacteria AnaerobicLakeschemistryBorealRNA Ribosomal 16SDissolved organic carbonOriginal ArticleOrganic matterEcosystemHypolimnionEcosystemFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsThe ISME Journal
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Interactions between 2-Aminobenzothiazole and Natural Organic Matter as Evidenced by CPMAS Nitrogen-15 NMR Spectroscopy

2009

Cross-polarization magic angle spinning (CPMAS) 15N nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy was used to study the interactions between 2-aminobenzothiazole (ABT) and natural organic matter in the presence of the natural enzyme laccase and synthetic air. Through the use of synthesized model compounds, we were able to confirm previous findings by CPMAS 13C NMR spectroscopy that showed the formation of covalent amide bonds. We also provide evidence of the presence of two additional H bonds between ABT and the natural organic matter. Both H bonds involved the amino and thiazole groups of ABT.

chemistry.chemical_classificationHydrogen bondSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaHASoil Science2-aminobenzothiazolenuclear magnetic resonance.Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyCPMAShumic acidCarbon-13 NMRABTNMRchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryCovalent bondMagic angle spinningOrganic chemistryOrganic mattercross-polarization magic angle spinningHPLChigh-performance liquid chromatographyThiazoleSpectroscopy
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Sediment delivery processes and the spatial distribution of caesium-137 in a small Sicilian basin

1998

The sediment delivery processes occurring in a small Sicilian basin are modelled using the spatially distributed SEDD model recently proposed by Ferro and Minacapilli. The model is applied by using soil data (grain-size distribution, organic matter content, etc.) of 129 samples uniformly distributed over the study area and compiling the available information (topographic map, soil data, etc.) into a Geographical Information System. Finally, the predictive capability of the distributed sediment delivery approach is tested experimentally using the caesium-137 measurement technique. The comparison between calculated sediment yield and the corresponding measured caesium-137 loss is used to vali…

chemistry.chemical_classificationHydrologyGeographic information systembusiness.industrySedimentStructural basinTopographic mapSpatial distributionchemistryCaesium-137Environmental scienceOrganic matterScale (map)businessWater Science and TechnologyHydrological Processes
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Changes in soil redox potential in response to flood irrigation with waste water in central Mexico

2017

Irrigation with untreated sewage water adds fresh organic matter to the soil. When it is applied by flooding, as in the Mezquital Valley of Mexico, many of the pores in the soil become temporarily waterlogged and depleted of oxygen, and reduction generates nitrous oxide (N2O) and methane (CH4). We monitored the redox potential, Eh, in the soil at two sites in the Mezquital Valley to discover whether the short-term gaseous emissions matched the changes in Eh. One site is irrigated periodically by flooding with waste water and has alfalfa, rye grass and maize grown in succession; the other site grows maize with water from summer rain only. Each electrode buried in the soil for the purpose pro…

chemistry.chemical_classificationHydrologyIrrigationbusiness.industrySoil ScienceSewage04 agricultural and veterinary sciences010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesLeaching modelInfiltration (hydrology)chemistryAgronomy040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterLeaching (agriculture)DrainagebusinessSurface irrigation0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEuropean Journal of Soil Science
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Fecal pellets from a dense aggregation of suspension-feeders in a stream: An example of ecosystem engineering

1998

Blackfly larvae (Diptera: Simuliidae) are "allogenic ecosystem engineers" that capture fine particulate and dissolved matter from suspension and egest much larger fecal pellets. We investigated the effects of blackfly larvae on organic matter transport at 25 sites along a small stream that flowed 500 m from a lake to the sea. Blackfly density was high upstream (>6 x 10(5) ind. m(-2)) and the numbers of fecal pellets in suspension rose markedly downstream from the blackfly aggregation. A total of 1.6 x 10(9) fecal pellets (biomass 3.2 kg C d(-1)) were discharged to the sea each day and 8.0 x 10(8) pellets (biomass 1.6 kg C d(-1)) were lost from suspension. Sedimenting pellets were available …

chemistry.chemical_classificationHydrologyPelletsBiomassAquatic ScienceBiologyOceanographyPopulation densityEcosystem engineerSuspension (chemistry)chemistryBenthic zoneEnvironmental chemistryOrganic matterEcosystemLimnology and Oceanography
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Water repellency as conditioned by particle size and drying in hydrophobized sand

2013

The effects of particle size and soil moisture on water repellency (WR) from hydrophobized sand are studied in this research. Quartz sand samples were separated into three sieve fractions: 0.5–2 mm (coarse sand, CS), 0.25–0.5 mm (medium sand, MS), and 0.05–0.25 mm (fine sand, FS). WR of sand was induced using different concentrations of stearic acid (SA; 0.5, 1, 5, 10, 20 and 30 g kg− 1). Moist samples have been exposed to two types of drying: air-drying at standard laboratory conditions and oven-drying at 50 °C. Change in moisture content, and water repellency has been monitored every 24 h for 10 days. After 1 day of drying, SA concentrations ≥ 10 g kg− 1 caused extreme WR in oven-dry samp…

chemistry.chemical_classificationHydrologySoil ScienceFraction (chemistry)law.inventionSievechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistrylawEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterOrganic matterParticle sizeStearic acidWater contentQuartzGeoderma
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Influence of soil properties on the aggregation of some Mediterranean soils and the use of aggregate size and stability as land degradation indicators

2001

Abstract Soil aggregation in relation to other soil properties was studied along a climatological transect in the Southeast of Spain. Three sites were selected along this transect ranging from semiarid to subhumid climatological conditions. The aggregate size distribution, the macro and microaggregate stability of the superficial soil horizon and their relations with other soil properties were analysed. Large aggregates (>10, 10–5, 5–2 mm) were present in highest proportions in the most arid of the studied areas. These large aggregates were associated with high values of water-stable microaggregates; however, they did not improve soil structure and are related to high bulk densities and low…

chemistry.chemical_classificationHydrologySoil textureSoil morphologySoil scienceSiltSoil structurechemistrySoil retrogression and degradationSoil waterSoil horizonOrganic matterGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesCatena
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Seasonal and spatial heterogeneity in the water chemistry of two sewage-affected saline shallow lakes from central Spain

2003

The seasonal features of the water chemistry in the saline shallow lakes Laguna de Manjavacas and Laguna del Pueblo (Castilla – La Mancha, Central Spain) were studied during 1990–1991 and in 1997. These lakes were both affected by sewage inputs driving them to a high trophic status. However, whereas sewage inputs entered Laguna del Pueblo directly, wastewater reached Laguna de Manjavacas after running for 8 km through a small riverbed, where natural processes caused partial mineralisation of organic matter. Moreover, water quality was further improved before entering the main water body of Laguna de Manjavacas, since water crossed through a wetland and high amounts of organic matter and ino…

chemistry.chemical_classificationHydrologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybusiness.industryEcologySewageWetlandAquatic SciencePlanktonAlgal bloomSalinitychemistryEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterWater qualityEutrophicationbusinessHydrobiologia
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Zur Ökologie Abwasserbelasteter Altrheine

1977

The backwaters of the Upper Rhine can be divided into two types, namely the Sondernheim type and the Leimersheim type. The first one obtains its water mainly from small tributaries of the Rhine, the latter one by the Rhine itself. Both of them are polluted to nearly the same extent by organic matter. In the Sondernheim type biological decomposition starts intensively. It leads to mass-production of a few animal species in the upper, to less production of a large number of animal species in the lower part of its flow. In the Leimersheim type neither biological decomposition, nor mass-production nor a high species-diversity are to be observed. The possible causes of this difference are under …

chemistry.chemical_classificationHydrologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorychemistryTributaryEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterAnimal speciesDecomposition
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