Organic matter of the anthropogenic dark earths of Amazonia.

The anthropogenic dark earths (ADE, Terra Preta de Índio or terra preta arqueológica, as are often referred to in Portuguese) feature unique properties that are interesting not only from a pedological point of view but have important agronomic and economic relevance. Among other properties, the organic matter (SOM) of these soils is considerably different from that of other mineral soils. Besides the quantity of SOM, its origin, composition and, consequently, function in the soil is different. Carbonized biomass (pyrogenic carbon) is a principal constituent of ADE that was, to our best knowledge, gradually incorporated into these soils, 4 to 10 thousand years ago, by native dwellers of the Amazon region. The carbon of pyrogenic origin was not only accumulated in ADE, but it also played important role in the transformation of organic matter and the humification process. As a result of this, the SOM of ADE is relatively stable, compared to the SOM of adjacent ferralsols, and at the same time it has chemical reactivity that is the major responsible for the higher cation exchange capacity and good buffer properties of these soils. These properties have very important environmental and agronomic relevance in the tropics due to organic carbon conservation in the soil and enhanced soil fertility. The ADE soils are excellent model for the development of modern soil fertility management practices.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: MADARI, B. E., CUNHA, T. J. F., SOARES, R.
Other Authors: BEATA EMOKE MADARI, CNPAF; TONY JARBAS FERREIRA CUNHA, CPATSA; RICARDO SOARES, UFF.
Format: Artigo de periódico biblioteca
Language:English
eng
Published: 2012-02-23T11:11:11Z
Subjects:Carbono pirogênico, Cor do solo, Terra preta de índio, Solo, Fertilidade do solo, Matéria orgânica,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/916216
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spelling dig-alice-doc-9162162017-08-15T22:42:31Z Organic matter of the anthropogenic dark earths of Amazonia. MADARI, B. E. CUNHA, T. J. F. SOARES, R. BEATA EMOKE MADARI, CNPAF; TONY JARBAS FERREIRA CUNHA, CPATSA; RICARDO SOARES, UFF. Carbono pirogênico Cor do solo Terra preta de índio Solo Fertilidade do solo Matéria orgânica The anthropogenic dark earths (ADE, Terra Preta de Índio or terra preta arqueológica, as are often referred to in Portuguese) feature unique properties that are interesting not only from a pedological point of view but have important agronomic and economic relevance. Among other properties, the organic matter (SOM) of these soils is considerably different from that of other mineral soils. Besides the quantity of SOM, its origin, composition and, consequently, function in the soil is different. Carbonized biomass (pyrogenic carbon) is a principal constituent of ADE that was, to our best knowledge, gradually incorporated into these soils, 4 to 10 thousand years ago, by native dwellers of the Amazon region. The carbon of pyrogenic origin was not only accumulated in ADE, but it also played important role in the transformation of organic matter and the humification process. As a result of this, the SOM of ADE is relatively stable, compared to the SOM of adjacent ferralsols, and at the same time it has chemical reactivity that is the major responsible for the higher cation exchange capacity and good buffer properties of these soils. These properties have very important environmental and agronomic relevance in the tropics due to organic carbon conservation in the soil and enhanced soil fertility. The ADE soils are excellent model for the development of modern soil fertility management practices. 2012-02-23T11:11:11Z 2012-02-23T11:11:11Z 2012-02-23T11:11:11Z 2012-02-23 2011 2012-02-23T11:11:11Z Artigo de periódico Dynamic Soil, Dynamic Plant, v. 5, n. 1, p. 21-28, 2011. http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/916216 en eng openAccess
institution EMBRAPA
collection DSpace
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-alice
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de EMBRAPA
language English
eng
topic Carbono pirogênico
Cor do solo
Terra preta de índio
Solo
Fertilidade do solo
Matéria orgânica
Carbono pirogênico
Cor do solo
Terra preta de índio
Solo
Fertilidade do solo
Matéria orgânica
spellingShingle Carbono pirogênico
Cor do solo
Terra preta de índio
Solo
Fertilidade do solo
Matéria orgânica
Carbono pirogênico
Cor do solo
Terra preta de índio
Solo
Fertilidade do solo
Matéria orgânica
MADARI, B. E.
CUNHA, T. J. F.
SOARES, R.
Organic matter of the anthropogenic dark earths of Amazonia.
description The anthropogenic dark earths (ADE, Terra Preta de Índio or terra preta arqueológica, as are often referred to in Portuguese) feature unique properties that are interesting not only from a pedological point of view but have important agronomic and economic relevance. Among other properties, the organic matter (SOM) of these soils is considerably different from that of other mineral soils. Besides the quantity of SOM, its origin, composition and, consequently, function in the soil is different. Carbonized biomass (pyrogenic carbon) is a principal constituent of ADE that was, to our best knowledge, gradually incorporated into these soils, 4 to 10 thousand years ago, by native dwellers of the Amazon region. The carbon of pyrogenic origin was not only accumulated in ADE, but it also played important role in the transformation of organic matter and the humification process. As a result of this, the SOM of ADE is relatively stable, compared to the SOM of adjacent ferralsols, and at the same time it has chemical reactivity that is the major responsible for the higher cation exchange capacity and good buffer properties of these soils. These properties have very important environmental and agronomic relevance in the tropics due to organic carbon conservation in the soil and enhanced soil fertility. The ADE soils are excellent model for the development of modern soil fertility management practices.
author2 BEATA EMOKE MADARI, CNPAF; TONY JARBAS FERREIRA CUNHA, CPATSA; RICARDO SOARES, UFF.
author_facet BEATA EMOKE MADARI, CNPAF; TONY JARBAS FERREIRA CUNHA, CPATSA; RICARDO SOARES, UFF.
MADARI, B. E.
CUNHA, T. J. F.
SOARES, R.
format Artigo de periódico
topic_facet Carbono pirogênico
Cor do solo
Terra preta de índio
Solo
Fertilidade do solo
Matéria orgânica
author MADARI, B. E.
CUNHA, T. J. F.
SOARES, R.
author_sort MADARI, B. E.
title Organic matter of the anthropogenic dark earths of Amazonia.
title_short Organic matter of the anthropogenic dark earths of Amazonia.
title_full Organic matter of the anthropogenic dark earths of Amazonia.
title_fullStr Organic matter of the anthropogenic dark earths of Amazonia.
title_full_unstemmed Organic matter of the anthropogenic dark earths of Amazonia.
title_sort organic matter of the anthropogenic dark earths of amazonia.
publishDate 2012-02-23T11:11:11Z
url http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/916216
work_keys_str_mv AT madaribe organicmatteroftheanthropogenicdarkearthsofamazonia
AT cunhatjf organicmatteroftheanthropogenicdarkearthsofamazonia
AT soaresr organicmatteroftheanthropogenicdarkearthsofamazonia
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