Soil management and ionic strength on selenite retention in oxidic soils

ABSTRACT Sorption of selenium (Se) on soils may be influenced by factors that are changed though agricultural practices usually performed for crop production, such as soil pH, competing anion and organic matter contents, among others. This study aimed to evaluate the influence of soil management and ionic strength (IS) on Se retention in Brazilian soils, which is important to predict Se availability in both systems, native and cultivated soils. For that, adsorption and desorption reactions of Se were evaluated in 16 soil samples (eight from cultivated soils and eight from native soils), using solutions containing 100 and 500 µg L-1 Se in the form of sodium selenate and in two IS, 15 and 150 mM. Se adsorption varied as a function of IS for most soils, which may indicate that the adsorption mechanism by outer-sphere complex is important for selenate retention in the studied soils, but future studies involving other techniques, such as spectroscopic studies, are needed to more clearly confirm the adsorption mechanism. In general, adsorption varied in relation to soil characteristics, and native soils adsorbed larger Se amounts than the cultivated soils. In terms of desorption, soils which had larger Se adsorbed amounts also presented larger desorbed amounts. Finally, IS and soil management influenced the availability of selenate in the studied soils.

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Main Authors: Araujo,Anderson Mendes, Lessa,Josimar Henrique de Lima, Ferreira,Liniker André, Guilherme,Luiz Roberto Guimarães, Lopes,Guilherme
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Editora da UFLA 2018
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-70542018000400395
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spelling oai:scielo:S1413-705420180004003952018-10-22Soil management and ionic strength on selenite retention in oxidic soilsAraujo,Anderson MendesLessa,Josimar Henrique de LimaFerreira,Liniker AndréGuilherme,Luiz Roberto GuimarãesLopes,Guilherme Adsorption/desorption reactions brazilian soils competitive anion soil cultivation retention/mobility. ABSTRACT Sorption of selenium (Se) on soils may be influenced by factors that are changed though agricultural practices usually performed for crop production, such as soil pH, competing anion and organic matter contents, among others. This study aimed to evaluate the influence of soil management and ionic strength (IS) on Se retention in Brazilian soils, which is important to predict Se availability in both systems, native and cultivated soils. For that, adsorption and desorption reactions of Se were evaluated in 16 soil samples (eight from cultivated soils and eight from native soils), using solutions containing 100 and 500 µg L-1 Se in the form of sodium selenate and in two IS, 15 and 150 mM. Se adsorption varied as a function of IS for most soils, which may indicate that the adsorption mechanism by outer-sphere complex is important for selenate retention in the studied soils, but future studies involving other techniques, such as spectroscopic studies, are needed to more clearly confirm the adsorption mechanism. In general, adsorption varied in relation to soil characteristics, and native soils adsorbed larger Se amounts than the cultivated soils. In terms of desorption, soils which had larger Se adsorbed amounts also presented larger desorbed amounts. Finally, IS and soil management influenced the availability of selenate in the studied soils.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessEditora da UFLACiência e Agrotecnologia v.42 n.4 20182018-08-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-70542018000400395en10.1590/1413-70542018424007318
institution SCIELO
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Araujo,Anderson Mendes
Lessa,Josimar Henrique de Lima
Ferreira,Liniker André
Guilherme,Luiz Roberto Guimarães
Lopes,Guilherme
spellingShingle Araujo,Anderson Mendes
Lessa,Josimar Henrique de Lima
Ferreira,Liniker André
Guilherme,Luiz Roberto Guimarães
Lopes,Guilherme
Soil management and ionic strength on selenite retention in oxidic soils
author_facet Araujo,Anderson Mendes
Lessa,Josimar Henrique de Lima
Ferreira,Liniker André
Guilherme,Luiz Roberto Guimarães
Lopes,Guilherme
author_sort Araujo,Anderson Mendes
title Soil management and ionic strength on selenite retention in oxidic soils
title_short Soil management and ionic strength on selenite retention in oxidic soils
title_full Soil management and ionic strength on selenite retention in oxidic soils
title_fullStr Soil management and ionic strength on selenite retention in oxidic soils
title_full_unstemmed Soil management and ionic strength on selenite retention in oxidic soils
title_sort soil management and ionic strength on selenite retention in oxidic soils
description ABSTRACT Sorption of selenium (Se) on soils may be influenced by factors that are changed though agricultural practices usually performed for crop production, such as soil pH, competing anion and organic matter contents, among others. This study aimed to evaluate the influence of soil management and ionic strength (IS) on Se retention in Brazilian soils, which is important to predict Se availability in both systems, native and cultivated soils. For that, adsorption and desorption reactions of Se were evaluated in 16 soil samples (eight from cultivated soils and eight from native soils), using solutions containing 100 and 500 µg L-1 Se in the form of sodium selenate and in two IS, 15 and 150 mM. Se adsorption varied as a function of IS for most soils, which may indicate that the adsorption mechanism by outer-sphere complex is important for selenate retention in the studied soils, but future studies involving other techniques, such as spectroscopic studies, are needed to more clearly confirm the adsorption mechanism. In general, adsorption varied in relation to soil characteristics, and native soils adsorbed larger Se amounts than the cultivated soils. In terms of desorption, soils which had larger Se adsorbed amounts also presented larger desorbed amounts. Finally, IS and soil management influenced the availability of selenate in the studied soils.
publisher Editora da UFLA
publishDate 2018
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-70542018000400395
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