Litcius/Paper detail

The diversity of volcanic soils: focusing on the function of aluminum–humus complexes

Tadashi Takahashi

2020Soil Science & Plant Nutrition24 citationsDOI

Abstract

Andosols (or Andisols) are the typical soils developed from volcanoclastic materials. They possess several distinctive properties that are rarely found in other groups of soils. These properties are largely due to the dominance of short-range ordered minerals (allophane, imogolite, and ferrihydrite) and/or mineral–humus complexes (Al/Fe–humus complexes). In this review, I survey the diversity of volcanic soils mainly from the viewpoint of the function of Al–humus complexes. Specific topics include the role of Al–humus complexes in organic carbon accumulation, Al solubility and kinetics, Al phytotoxicity to plants, and the suppression of soil-borne diseases. It is shown that Al–humus complexes are heavily involved in the diversity of these properties of volcanic soils.

Topics & Concepts

HumusAllophaneImogoliteAndosolSoil waterChemistryFerrihydriteEnvironmental chemistrySoil scienceGeologyGeochemistryOrganic chemistryAdsorptionClay minerals and soil interactionsIron oxide chemistry and applicationsSoil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics