6 research outputs found

    A Soil Health Card (SHC) for soil quality monitoring of agricultural lands in south-eastern coastal region of Bangladesh

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    Abstract Background The present study introduces an alternate tool of laboratory analysis named Soil Health Card (SHC) for soil quality monitoring and routine field observations by farmers. Results Different physicochemical and nutrient contents of soil, i.e. pH, electric conductivity, soil organic matter, organic carbon, total nitrogen, phosphorous, sulfur and boron were assessed by laboratory analysis collected from the different fields of Noakhali district of Bangladesh. These parameters were scored according to the soil fertility standards according to Bangladesh Agriculture Research Council. Results found that, the soil quality of all the studied fields are medium category. Again, a SHC was prepared using soil structure, subsurface compaction, aggregate stability, status of ground cover, soil smell, soil pH, color, organic matter content, drainage capacity, diversity of micro-life, earthworm contents, infiltration rate, soil aeration, crop coverage and leaf color. The result of SHC is interestingly similar to the laboratory experiment results. Conclusions Analyzing these two methods it was found that, the SHC is truly representative, much convenient, precise, coast effective and easily understandable to the marginal farmers. However, SHC can be an alternative to farmer for sustainable farm management

    Insights into solubility of soil humic substances and their fluorescence characterisation in three characteristic soils

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    Soil humic substances (HS) are involved in almost all biogeochemical processes and functions in soils, thus their extraction from aiming to their characterization is very important. However, many factors that influence HS extraction from soil still need further studies. The aim of this work was to assess and quantify comparatively the solubility of soil HS as a function of extraction time, various extractants, solid to liquid ratio and sequential extraction. In this work three different soils, i.e. a forest, a maize and a paddy soil, were examined to assess the solubility of soil HS based on their fluorescence (excitation-emission matrix, EEM) features and changes in nutrient (NO3−-N, PO43−-P and dissolved Si) contents using multiple extraction approaches (time-dependent, various extractants, solid to liquid ratio, and sequential extraction). Three fluorescent components, i.e. humic acids-like (HA-like), fulvic acids-like (FA-like), and protein-like fluorophores (PLF), were identified by parallel factor (PARAFAC) analysis of EEM spectra of the various soil extracts. The solubility of HS, dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and nutrients were shown to increase with extraction time, except for PLF. The FA-like fraction disappeared completely in KCl extracts of all three soils, suggesting the inefficiency of salt extraction. Conversely, HS and nutrients solubility substantially increased in alkaline extracts, and dissolved Si was correlated significantly with the fluorescent intensities of HA-like and FA-like, thus confirming the well-known typical process of alkaline dissolution of HS bound to phytolith and silicate minerals. The relative solubility of HS and nutrients was higher at lower solid to liquid ratio (1:250–1:100), whereas their maximum yields was achieved at high solid to liquid ratio (1:10) for all three soils. Sequential extraction results showed that the first water extraction step contributed 42–55% of HS, which suggested that a single extraction was insufficient to recover HS. In conclusion, water and alkaline extraction could provide, respectively, the labile and insoluble complexed HS existing in soil

    Isolation of dissolved organic matter from aqueous solution by precipitation with FeCl3: mechanisms and significance in environmental perspectives

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    Abstract Ferric ions can bind strongly with dissolved organic matter (DOM), including humic acids (HA), fulvic acids (FA), and protein-like substances, whereas isolation of Fe-DOM precipitates (Fe-DOMP) and their biochemical characteristics remain unclear. In this work FeCl3 was used to isolate DOM components from various sources, including river, lake, soil, cow dung, and standard tryptophan and tyrosine, through precipitation at pH 7.5–8.5. The Fe-DOMP contribute to total DOM by approximately 38.6–93.8% of FA, 76.2% of HA and 25.0–30.4% of tryptophan and tyrosine, whilst fluorescence spectra allowed to monitor/discriminate the various DOM fractions in the samples. The relative intensity of the main infrared peaks such as 3406‒3383 cm−1 (aromatic OH), 1689‒1635 cm−1 (‒COOH), 1523–1504 cm−1 (amide) and 1176–1033 cm−1 (‒S=O) show either to decline or disappear in Fe‒DOMP. These results suggest the occurrence of Fe bonds with various functional groups of DOM, indicating the formation of π–d electron bonding systems of different strengths in Fe‒DOMP. The novel method used for isolation of Fe-DOMP shows promising in opening a new frontier both at laboratory and industrial purposes. Furthermore, results obtained may provide a better understanding of metal–organic complexes involved in the regulation of the long-term stabilization/sequestration of DOM in soils and waters

    New insights into mechanisms of sunlight- and dark-mediated high-temperature accelerated diurnal production-degradation of fluorescent DOM in lake waters

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    The production of fluorescent dissolved organic matter (FDOM) by phytoplankton and its subsequent degradation, both of which occur constantly under diurnal-day time sunlight and by night time dark-microbial respiration processes in the upper layer of surface waters, influence markedly several biogeochemical processes and functions in aquatic environments and can be feasibly related to global warming (GW). In this work sunlight-mediated high-temperature was shown to accelerate the production of FDOM, but also its complete disappearance over a 24-h diurnal period in July at the highest air and water temperatures (respectively, 41.1 and 33.5 °C), differently from lower temperature months. Extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), an early-state DOM, were produced by phytoplankton in July in the early morning (6:00–9:00), then they were degraded into four FDOM components over midday (10:00–15:00), which was followed by simultaneous production and almost complete degradation of FDOM with reformation of EPS during the night (2:00–6:00). Such transformations occurred simultaneously with the fluctuating production of nutrients, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) and the two isotopes (δ15N and δ18O) of NO3−. It was estimated that complete degradation of FDOM in July was associated with mineralization of approximately 15% of the initial DOC, which showed a nighttime minimum (00:00) in comparison to a maximum at 13:00. FDOM identified by excitation-emission matrix spectroscopy combined with parallel factor analysis consisted of EPS, autochthonous humic-like substances (AHLS) of C- and M-types, a combined form of C- and M-types of AHLS, protein-like substances (PLS), newly-released PLS, tryptophan-like substances, tyrosine-like substances (TYLS), a combined form of TYLS and phenylalanine-like substances (PALS), and their degradation products. Finally, stepwise degradation and production processes are synthesized in a pathway for FDOM components production and their subsequent transformation under different diurnal temperature conditions, which provided a broader paradigm for future impacts on GW-mediated DOM dynamics in lake water
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