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The chemistry of submerged soils
Presented byJ.Anandhan,2015672001
CONTENTS
1. Introduction2. Kinds of submerged soils3. Characteristics of submerged soils4. Electro chemical changes in submerged soils5. Chemical transformations of submerged soils6. Mineral equilibria in submerged soils7. References
INTRODUCTION
Applications in geochemistry, agriculture, limnology, oceanography and pollution
72% of the earth's surface is covered by submerged soils and sediments
It is suitable of wet soils for crops, aquatic lives, marine plants and sinks for many nutrients
Acts as reservoir for many nutrients
KINDS
a. WATERLOGGED (GLEY) SOILSb. MARSH SOILSc. PADDY SOILSd. SUBAQUATIC SOILS
A. WATERLOGGED (GLEY) SOILS
saturated with water for a sufficiently long time annually Forms horizons like:
(a) a partially oxidized A horizon high in organic matter (b) a mottled zone (c) a permanently reduced zone with bluish green colour
(Robinson, 1949)
B. MARSH SOILS
Freshwater marsh occur on the fringes of lakes and the networks of streams
that feed them In this the G horizon is blue or green Types,
• Upland (pH 3.5-4.5)• Lowland (pH 5.0-6.0)• Transitional
Saltwater marsh marshes are found in estuaries, deltas and tidal flats it is green if iron silicates are present and dark grey if
pyrites are the main iron minerals
Fresh water marshes
salt water marshes
C. PADDY SOILS
Developed by cultivation practises of paddy (includes puddling, levelling and water stagnation)
When irrigated soil undergoes reduction and turns dark grey. Fe, Mn, Si and P become more soluble and diffuse to the
surface Moves by diffusion and mass flow to the roots and to the
subsoil. When Fe2+ and Mn2+ reach the oxygenated surface, the surface of rice roots, or the oxidized zone below the plough sole they are oxidized and precipitated along with silica and phosphate
It is Sandwiched between the oxidized surface layer and the zone of Fe and Mn illuviation.
The root zone of rice with reddish-brown streaks along root channels.
When the land is drained at harvest, almost the entire profile above the water table is reoxidized, giving it a highly mottled appearance.
Precipitation in the plough layer is not pedologically of any consequence because ploughing and puddling redistribute the deposits
Downward movement of Fe and Mn causes loss of these elements from the topsoil. The eluviated Fe and Mn, along with some phosphate, are deposited below the plow sole to produce an iron-rich B1r horizon overlying a manganese-rich Bmn horizon.
Reduction eluviation and oxidative illuviation as the soil forming processes characteristic of paddy soils and have proposed the new term "Aquorizem" at the Great Soil Group level to define soils which have the sequence of reductive eluviation/oxidative illuviation. (Kyuma and Kawaguchi (1966) )
A well developed paddy soil has the horizon sequence Apg,/Birg/ B2g/G (Kanno (1957))
Cultivation of Rice
D. SUBAQUATIC SOILS
Formed from river, lake, and ocean sediments. Formed by,
• the sediments are formed from soil components • typical soil-forming processes such as hydrolysis, oxidation-
reduction, precipitation, synthesis, and exchange of matter• deep sea sediments contain OM and a living bacterial flora
CHARACTERS OF SUBAQUATIC SOILS
the bacteria in lake and ocean sediments are similar to those in soils
the metabolism of subaquatic sediments is similar to those of submerged soils
the uppermost layers show ’A’ horizon differentiation distinct from physical stratification
sediments differ in texture, composition, clay mineralogy, organic matter content, and oxidation-reduction level
CHARACTERISTICS OF SUBMERGED SOILS
A. Absence of Molecular Oxygen B. Oxidized Mud-Water InterfaceC. Exchanges between Mud and WaterD. Presence of Marsh PlantsE. Soil Reduction
A. ABSENCE OF MOLECULAR OXYGEN
Gas exchange between soil and air is drastically reduced O2 and other atmospheric gases can enter the soil only by
molecular diffusion in the interstitial water is 10,000 times slower than diffusion in gas-filled pores
Within a few hours of soil submergence, microorganisms use up the oxygen present in the water or trapped in the soil and render a submerged soil practically devoid of molecular oxygen
Oxygen moves through water layer
Soil layer with no oxygen (anaerobic)
Thin aerobic soil layer
B. OXIDIZED MUD-WATER INTERFACE
Concentration of O2 may be high in the surface layer which is a few millimeters thick and in contact with oxygenated water
Below the surface layer, the O2 concentration drops abruptly to practically zero
The chemical and microbiological regimes in the surface layer resemble those in aerobic soils
C. EXCHANGES BETWEEN MUD AND WATER
The presence of this oxygenated surface layer in lake and ocean muds is of the most ecological importance because it acts as a sink for phosphate and other plant nutrients and as a chemical barrier to the passage of certain plant nutrients from the mud to the water
The surface may use up oxygen faster than it receives it, undergo reduction and release large amounts of nutrients from the lake mud into the water
In summer, some lakes undergo thermal differentiation into three layers:• Epilimnion • Thermocline • Hypolimnion
The epilimnion is the surface layer of warm water 10-20 m deep which because of mixing by wind action, is uniform in temperature and is saturated with atmospheric O2 from top to bottom. (Mortimer, 1949).
Immediately below this is the thermocline, a layer in which there is a rapid fall in temperature with depth. In this, the concentration of O2 is relatively constant in lakes poor in plant nutrients (oligotrophic lakes), but it decreases with depth in lakes rich in plant nutrients (eutrophic lakes) (Ruttner, 1963).
The hypolimnion is the layer of cold stagnant water practically isolated from the epilimnion, except for solids, both organic and inorganic, that sink through it and accumulate on the mud surface. Bacteria in the surface layer use the O2 in it to oxidize the organic matter.
D. PRESENCE OF MARSH PLANTS
Plants growing in submerged soils have two adaptations that enable the roots to ward off toxic reduction products, accumulate nutrients, and grow in an O2 -free medium: O2 transport from the aerial parts and anaerobic respiration
It has been known for quite some time that the roots of marsh plants receive their oxygen from the aerial parts (shoot, air roots or stilt roots) through gas spaces connecting these organs
E. SOIL REDUCTION
The most important chemical difference submerged soil is in a reduced state.
Except for the thin, brown, oxidized layer at the surface (and sometimes an oxidized zone in the subsoil), a submerged soil is grey or greenish, has a low oxidation-reduction potential, and contains the reduced counterparts of NO2-, SO4
2-, Mn4+, Fe3+, and CO2, NH4
+, H2S, Mn2+, Fe2+, and CH4
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OXIDATION AND REDUCTION IN AN AEROBIC SOIL
Organic matter in soil gives up 4 electrons (e-) which are received by O2. As a result, O2 is reduced. Hydrogen ions (H+) react with the reduced O2 to form water (H2O).
4 e- + O2 + 4 H+→ 2 H2O
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OXIDATION AND REDUCTION IN AN ANAEROBIC SOIL
Electrons (e-) from organic matter in soil are accepted by nitrate (NO3
-) instead of O2.
Nitrogen (N) in NO3- is reduced;
the N compound becomes nitrogen gas (N2) Hydrogen ions (H+) react with oxygen from NO3
- to produce H2O.
10 e- + 2 NO3- + 12 H+→ 1 N2 + 6
H2O
A change in chemistry results in a change of soil color• bright colors indicate a well-drained soil• submerged soils change to a gray or
blue-green color (often referred to as gley)
• Reddish-yellowish brown colors are an indication of iron oxides in a well-drained environment
• Submergence causes iron to be reduced resulting in a different iron form and the gley color
Well-drained soil profile
Reduced soil profile
1. OXIDATION-REDUCTION POTENTIAL
Oxidation-reduction is a chemical reaction in which electrons are transferred from a donor to an acceptor.
The source of electrons for biological reductions is organic matter.
Redox potential (Eh) is a quantitative measure of the tendency of a given system to oxidize or reduce susceptible substances. Eh is positive and high in strongly oxidizing systems; Negative in negative and low in strongly reducing systems
Change in free energy
Redox potential is measured using following equation,
Where,• Eh = Redox potential• Eo = Eh at where Oxi and Red are equal• F = Faruday’s constant
MEASUREMENT OF REDOX POTENTIAL
Redox meter Platinum electrode
Clark and Arnon,1960-65
Reaction sequence following submergenceReaction sequence after draining
Chemical Reduction Sequence of Submergence
O2
N2
Mn2+
Fe2+
NO3-
MnO2
Fe3+
CO2
CH4
SO4-2
H2S
H2OSlightly
Reduced
Moderately Reduced
Strongly Reduced
Oxidized
Redox potential of various compounds under submergence
Patrick (1964), and Turner and Patrick (1968)
ELECTROCHEMICAL CHANGES IN SUBMERGED SOILS
Submerging a soil brings about a variety of electrochemical changes. These include,
(a) a decrease in redox potential, (b) an increase in pH of acid soils and a decrease in pH of
alkaline soils, (c) changes in specific conductance and ionic strength, (d) drastic shifts in mineral equilibria, (e) cation and anion exchange reactions, (f) sorption and desorption of ions.
A. REDOX POTENTIAL
The low potentials (0.2 to -0.4 V) of submerged soils and sediments reflect this reduced state.
The high potentials (0.8 to 0.3 V) of aerobic media, their oxidized condition.
1. SUBMERGED SOILS AND MUDS
When an aerobic soil is submerged, its Eh decreases during the first few days and reaches a minimum (-0.42 V ).
Then it increases, attains a maximum, and decreases again asymptotically to a value characteristic of the soil, after 8-12 weeks of submergence
The presence of native or added organic matter sharpens and hastens the first minimum, nitrate abolishes it (0.2 V). The rapid initial decrease of Eh is apparently due to the release of reducing substances accompanying oxygen depletion before Mn(IV) and Fe(III) oxide hydrates can mobilize their buffer capacity
The course, rate, and magnitude of the Eh decrease depend on the kind and amount of organic matter, the nature, and content of electron acceptors, temperature, and the duration of submergence
(Ponnamperuma, 1955, 1965; Motomura,1962; Yamane and Sato, 1968).
B. PH
Decrease of pH in first few days of submergence, then it reaches minimum and increases to a stable value (6.7 – 7.2)
pH of soils
C. SPECIFIC CONDUCTANCE
The specific conductance of depends on the kind and concentration of ions present.
Ionic strength (I) = ½ CiZi
Where, Ci= concentration of ions (mol/lit)
Zi = valence of ions Under reduced condition ionic strength was equal to 16 times
the specific conductance (k) in mhos/cm at 25°C
CHEMICAL TRANSFORMATIONS IN SUBMERGED SOILS
A. CarbonB. NitrogenC. IronD. ManganeseE. SulfurF. PhosphorusG. SiliconH. Trace Elements
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FORM OF COMPOUNDS IN AERATED AND SUBMERGED SOIL
Element Aerated soil (Oxidized)
Submerged soil (Reduced)
Oxygen (O) Oxygen gas (O2) Water (H2O)
Nitrogen (N) Nitrate ion (NO3-) Nitrogen gas (N2)
Manganese (Mn) Manganese IV ion (Mn4+) Manganese II ion (Mn2+)Iron (Fe) Iron III ion (Fe3+) Iron II ion (Fe2+)Sulfur (S) Sulfate ion (SO4
2-) Hydrogen sulfide (H2S)Carbon (C) Carbon dioxide (CO2) Methane (CH4)
A. CARBON
The two main transformations of carbon in nature are photosynthesis and respiration. On the balance between these two processes depend (a) the amount of organic matter that accumulates in soils and sediments, and
(b) the quality of streams, lakes, and estuaries. In submerged soils, respiration (decomposition of organic matter) is the main transformation
1. DECOMPOSITION OF ORGANIC MATTER
In well drained soils aerobic microbes will decompose OM to form CO2, NO3
-, SO42-.
Under submerged condition anaerobic microbes will decompose OM to produce CO2, H2, CH4, NH4
+, amines, mercaptans, H2S, and partially humified residues
2. PYRUVIC ACID METABOLISM
This will occur in both aerobic and submerged conditions. The precursor is sugars like glucose
C6H12O6 + 2ATP + 2NAD+ 2CH3COCOOH + 4ATP + 2NADH + 8H+
(Pyruvic acid) Under submerged condition Pyruvic acid will transforms,
(a) reduction to lactic acid, (b) decarboxylation to CO2 and CH3CHO (c) dissimilation to lactic, butyric and acetic acids and CO2, (d) cleavage to acetic, formic acids, H2, and CO2, (c) carboxylation to oxaloacetic acid (f) condensation with itself or acetaldehyde to give acetylmethylcarbinol
Werkman and Schlenk (1951),
2. KINETICS OF CO2
1 to 3 tons of CO2 are produced in the ploughed layer of 1 ha of a soil during the first few weeks of submergence (IRRI, 1964).
Being chemically active, it forms HCOO-, HCO3- and insoluble CO3
2-. The excess accumulates as gas. The partial pressure of CO2 in a soil increases after submergence,
reaches a peak of 0.2-0.8 atm 1-3 weeks later and declines to a fairly stable value of 0.05-0.2 atm
The decline in Pco2 after 1-4 weeks of submergence is due to escape, leaching, removal as insoluble CO3
2-, dilution by CH4 produced during the decomposition of organic acids, and bacterial reduction of CO2to CH4
4. KINETICS OF VOLATILE ORGANIC ACIDS The main organic acids found in anaerobic soils and sewage are
formic, acetic, propionic, and butyric acids. When a soil is submerged, the concentration of volatile organic
acids increases, reaches a peak value of 10-40 mmol/lit in 1-2 weeks and then declines to less than 1 mmol/lit a few weeks later.
Soils high in native or added organic matter produce high concentrations of acids (Motomura, 1962).
Low temperature retards acid formation slightly, but acid destruction markedly.
Thus organic acids persist longer in cold soils than in warm soils.
Ammonium sulphate appears to increase acetic acid formation but suppresses the formation of propionic and butyric acids
5. METHANE FERMENTATION
Methane is the typical end product of the anaerobic decomposition of organic matter.
Some of the methane is oxidized bacterially at the surface of paddy soils (Harrison and Aiyer, 1913, 1915) and in the oxygenated strata of lakes (Hutchinson, 1957).
Methane formation is ecologically important because it helps the disposal of large amounts of organic matter sedimented in lakes.
Methane is produced by a small group of obligate anaerobes (like Methansarcina inethanica).
Methane bacteria function best at temperatures above 30°C, but most abundant in natural anaerobic waters, produces methane even at 50°C (Ruttner, 1963).
Methane bacteria are highly substrate specific and can metabolize only a small number of simple organic and inorganic substances, usually the products of fermentation.
B. NITROGEN
In submerged soils, the main transformations are 1. Accumulation of ammonia, 2. Denitrification, 3. Nitrogen fixation.
1. ACCUMULATION OF AMMONIA
Ammonia production in submerged soils follows a roughly asymptotic course and the kinetics of ammonia release can be described by
log (A-y) = log A – ctWhere, A = mean maximum NH4-N concentration
y = actual concentration ‘t’ days after submergence c = parameter depending on the soil.
(Ponnamperuma, 1965)
2. DENITRIFICATION Nitrate undergoes two transformations in submerged soils:
assimilation or reduction of NO3- with incorporation of the
products into cell substance dissimilation or nitrate respiration in which NO3
- functions as an alternative to O2 as an electron acceptor
Rate of denitrification increases with temperature up to 60°C. Denitrification will occurs at below the redox potential of 350
mv Denitrification is slow in high OM soils (OM provides C, H and
O2 to microbes ) Alternate wetting and drying increases denitrification loss
3. N2 FIXATION
BNF is reduction of N2 to NH3. It requires high electron activity or low pE
pE = - log ae
Where ae = activity of e-
Microbes help in BNF are Nostoc, Anabaena, Ocillatoria, Tolypothrix, Calothrix, Phormidium and some algae species
Slight alkaline and high P will increase the N- fixation They fix as much as 22 kg /ha of N2
N transformation in soil
N transformations in aerobic vs anerobic
C. IRON
The reduction of iron has important chemical consequences: (a) the concentration of water-soluble iron (Fe2+)increases; (b) pH increases (c) cations are displaced from exchange sites (d) the solubility of phosphorus and silica increases and (e) new minerals are formed.
In acid soils high in OM and Fe will increases to 600 ppm within 1-6 weeks after submergence
Fe2O4.nH2O Fe3+ Fe2+ (Clay) Fe2+ diffuses and mass flow to the surface of soil and also to
plant roots where oxidise and forms precipitates under the plough sole
Grey colour mottles due to FeS2
Paddy soils contains hydrated magnetite (Fe2O4.nH2O) along with some hydrtrolilite (FeS.nH2O)
D. MANGANESE
In submerged soils Mn2+ availability is increased by conversion of Mn(IV) oxides into Mn(II) ions or carbonates
These Mn2+ ions moves to the oxygenated interfaces in soils by mass flow and diffusion
When co2 concentrations in soil increases Mn2+ precipitated as MnCO3
E. SULPHUR
In aerated soils,1. Elemental S is converted into SO4
2-, sulphides and organic sulphur compounds
2. Reduction of SO42- and incorporation into plant
tissues as elemental S.In submerged soils,3. SO4
2- to sulphide ,
4. Other S containing compounds into H2S (forms bad ordous )
5. And used by S reducing microbes like Desulfovibrio
F. PHOSPHORUS Phosphorus in valence states from +5 to -3 The forms are phosphite, hypophosphite, phosphine and
phosphate in anaerobic media. Soils having forms like,
(a) iron(III) and aluminum phosphates (in acid soils)(b) phosphates adsorbed or co-precipitated with Fe(IlI) and Mn(IV) hydrous oxides (c) phosphates held by anion exchange on clay and hydrous oxides, (d) calcium phosphates (in neutral & alkali soils)(e) organic phosphates.
The increase in concentration of water-soluble P on soil submergence
(Stumm and Morgan, 1970)
1. Sandy clay (pH= 7.6)14. Clay(pH= 4.6)25. Sandy loam(pH= 4.8)26. Clay loam(pH= 7.6)27. Clay(pH= 6.6)
G. SILICON
In soils occurs as crystalline and amorphous silica Also as silicates, adsorbed or co-precipitated with hydrous
oxides of Al, Fe(III)and Mn(IV), and also dissolved in the soil solution.
Dissolved silica is present as monomeric Si(OH) 4. The concentration of Si(OH) 4, in equilibrium with amorphous
silica at 25°C is 120-140 ppm as SiO2, and is independent of pH 2 to 9.
Submergence will slightly increases (due to release by Fe3+ ions and higher CO2 concentration) and then decreases the Si concentrations ( decrease in Pco2).
H. TRACE ELEMENTS
Submergence will increase availability of Co, Cu and Zn. Increase in pH of acid soils lower the solubility of nutrients
due to release of Sulphide which forms precipitates The elements in reduced layer will moves towards to the
oxidised layer
MINERAL EQUILIBRIA IN SUBMERGED SOILS
A. Redox Systems B. Carbonate Systems
A. REDOX SYSTEMS
Reduction sequences as follows under submerged condition of soil,
O2, NO3-, Mn4+, Fe3+, SO4
2-, CO2, N2 and H+. These each are associated with H+ ions and Electrons. They includes systems like,
1. The O2 – H2O system
2. The N2 system
3. The Mn system4. The Fe system5. The sulphur system
B. CARBONATE SYSTEMS
It includes,(a) high concentrations of CO2
(b) the presence of the divalent cations, Fe2+, Mn2+, Ca2+ and Mg2+ in most soils, CaCO3 in calcareous soils and NaHCO3 in sodic soils (c) intimate contact between solid, solution, and gas phases(d) virtual isolation of the system from the surroundings. Thus sodic soils behave like NaHCO3, calcareous soils like CaCO3, ferruginous soils like Fe3O4nH20, and manganiferrous soils likeMnCO3 when submerged and equilibrated with CO2.
(Ponnamperuma et al., 1969)
It includes the systems like,1. The Na2CO3 – H2O – CO2 system
2. The CaCO3 – H2O – CO2 system
3. The MnCO4 – H2O – CO2 system
4. The FeCO3 – H2O – CO2 system
Physical changes of submerged soils
Drastically retards gas exchange between soil and air
Stabilizes soil temperature
Causes swelling of colloids
Destroys aggregates Reduces permeability
EFFECTS OF FLOODING
RETARDATION OF GAS EXCHANGE Oxygen deficiency - The moment a soil is flooded, its oxygen
supply is virtually cut off. Oxygen can enter the soil only by molecular diffusion in the interstitial water. The process is 10,000 times slower than in gas-filled pores.
Thus the oxygen diffusion rate suddenly decreases when a soil reaches saturation by water. Within a few hours of flooding, microorganisms use up the oxygen present in the water or trapped in the soil and render a submerged soil practically devoid of molecular oxygen.
A flooded soil, however, is not uniformly devoid of oxygen: the oxygen concentration may be high in the surface layer which is a few millimeters thick and in contact with oxygenated water.
The thickness of the layer represents a balance between diffusion from the flood water and oxygen consumption by the soil.
It increases in thickness as the crop matures. Below the surface layer, the oxygen concentration drops abruptly to practically zero.
The brown color of the oxygenated layer, its chemical properties, and its oxidation-reduction potential undergo a similar abrupt change with depth in submerged soils. The root zone of rice is practically free of molecular oxygen (Ponnamperuma 1972).
RETARDATION OF GAS EXCHANGE
ACCUMULATION OF CARBON DIOXIDE
The presence of a layer of water also drastically cuts down the escape of soil gases. Carbon dioxide, methane, hydrogen, and nitrogen produced in the soil tend to accumulate, build up pressure, and escape as bubbles.
The partial pressure of carbon dioxide in a soil increases after submergence and reaches a peak of 0.2 – 0.8 bars 1-3 weeks later. Carbon dioxide injury to rice may occur on acid soils low in iron, in organic soils, and cold soils.
STABILIZATION OF SOIL TEMPERATURE
The effects of flooding on soil temperature follow from three important thermal properties of water – its high specific heat, high latent heat of vaporization, and a higher thermal conductivity than soil material.
The high specific heat prevents violent temperature fluctuation. The high heat of vaporization tends to keep flooded soils cooler than dry soils.
The cooling effect is used to reduce high temperature injury in hot locations while the stabilizing effect is used to prevent low temperature injury at night.
Standing water markedly influences the microclimate of the first 50 cm above the soil surface (Nagai 1958). Introduction of cold or warm water into the field rapidly changes the temperature of soil, air, and plants.
Low soil temperatures retard mineralization of organic nitrogen and phosphorus and favor the accumulation of carbon dioxide, organic acids, and excess water-soluble iron in flooded soils (Cho and Ponnamperuma 1971, Ponnamperuma 1976).
STABILIZATION OF SOIL TEMPERATURE
The adverse effects of low soil and water temperatures are present in tropical soils above 1000 m and in soils irrigated by cold, mountain streams.
Low water temperature reduces germination, retards growth, and depresses grain yield.
Grain yield is reduced if the water temperature is less than 17 degrees C during the active tillering and meiotic stages.
Rice with panicle primordia above the water level suffered less yield reduction (IRRI 1980).
STABILIZATION OF SOIL TEMPERATURE
SWELLING OF COLLOIDS When a dry soil is flooded, soil colloids absorb water and
swell. The rate of water sorption and volume increase of mineral soils depend on the clay content, type of clay mineral, and the nature of the adsorbed cations. Swelling is usually complete in one to three days.
The higher the clay content the greater the swelling. The expanding-lattice type of clays (montmorillonite and beidellite) swell more than the fixed-lattice type (kaolinite and halloysite). Sodium clays swell more than calcium and potassium clays.
When a puddled soil is dried, it shrinks and the decrease in volume equals the volume of water lost.
Deep cracks are common in puddled rice fields after draining and drying.
They cause heavy loss of water by percolation during reflooding (Wickham and Singh 1978).
SWELLING OF COLLOIDS
CONSISTENCY As the moisture content of a soil increases the cohesion of
water films around soil particles causes them to stick together rendering the soil plastic. At this moisture content soils are easily puddled.
At higher moisture contents (as in flooded soils), cohesion decreases rapidly, making tillage easy. But penetration increases and soil strength decreases, rendering the use of heavy machinery impractical on flooded soils.
DESTRUCTION OF SOIL AGGREGATES
When a dry soil is flooded, the aggregates become saturated with water. During the process, internal air pressure disrupts the aggregates (Baver et al 1972). Swelling of colloids and dissolution of cementing agents, such as iron oxide, further decrease aggregate stability.
Sodic soils show marked aggregate breakdown on flooding, whereas soils high in iron and aluminum oxides and organic matter suffer little aggregate destruction (Sanchez 1976). On soil drying and oxidation, reaggregation occurs through soil cracking and cementing by higher oxides of iron.
REDUCTION OF PERMEABILITY (PERCOLATION RATE)
Flooding decreases percolation rate in soils of low permeability even without puddling. This has been attributed to dispersion of soil particles, swelling, aggregate destruction, and clogging of pores by microbial slime.
In porous, non-swelling soils, flooding (by providing a greater head of water) increases percolation (Wickham and Singh 1978).
REFERENCES
1. The Chemistry of Submerged Soils, F.N. Ponnamperuma, Advances in Agronomy, Vol. 24
2. Physical changes in flooded soils, F.N. Ponnamperuma
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