Summary
Published in Canadian Journal of Soil Science 88: 315-325
Relationships between soil organic carbon (SOC), organic matter (SOM), and bulk density (BD) were established in acidic loamy to sandy loam fine fractions of forest soils in Québec (Canada). The interest of such relationships rests with the possibility of using simple and rapid techniques to estimate SOC and BD. It is also a crucial step in establishing the correspondence among several data bases when SOC data are obtained using different measurement techniques. In this study, SOC was measured by dry combustion (SOCDC) and wet digestion (SOCWD) methods, and organic matter by loss-on ignition (LOI). Our results suggest that, in these soils: (1) LOI can be used for estimating SOC (r2 = 0.95, RMSEP = 16%) and SOCDC/SOM significantly decreased with increasing depth from 0.49 to 0.27; (2) SOCDC and SOCWD were highly correlated. Even if SOCWD provided near complete recovery of SOCDC, dry combustion remains the preferred method for SOC analysis since SOCWD recovery decreased with increasing depth from 100 to 83%. (3) BD was also strongly related to SOM (r2 = 0.81). We recommend using the organic density approach to estimate BD from SOM because it allows BD to be predicted without significant bias and with a degree of accuracy of 14%.
File
Sector(s):
Forests
Categorie(s):
Scientific Article
Theme(s):
Ecosystems and Environment, Forest Ecology, Forestry Research, Forests
Departmental author(s):
Author(s)
PÉRIÉ, Catherine and Rock OUIMET
Year of publication :
2008
Format :
Keywords :
forest soils, soil organic carbon, soil organic matter, soil bulk density, ecosystems and environment, forestry research scientific article