Font Size: a A A

THE EFFECTS OF TREE-TIP MICROTOPOGRAPHY ON SOIL GENESIS, NORTHERN MICHIGAN

Posted on:1988-05-23Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignCandidate:SCHAETZL, RANDALL JOHNFull Text:PDF
GTID:1473390017956971Subject:Physical geography
Abstract/Summary:
even sites in northern Michigan, each consisting of a treethrow pit/mound pair and an adjacent undisturbed site, were examined to determine: (1) the effects of uprooting on soil horizon disturbance; and (2) post-uprooting pathways of pedogenesis. On slopes of less than 25%, uprooting creates mixed horizonation within mounds. On steeper slopes a type of "inverted" soil profile is often observed in mounds, believed due to post-uprooting ground fire. Such fires consume the trunks and supporting roots of downed trees, allowing overhanging root plates and charred wood to settle onto the groundsurface in a relatively undisturbed, yet inverted, manner.;In pits, soils (Spodosols) exhibit deep translocation of sesquioxides and organic carbon; mound soils are very weakly horizonated. Soil development indices show that pit pedons are equally, or more strongly developed than undisturbed sites, despite the much younger age of the former. Therefore, rates of pedogenesis in pits may be 5-10 times faster than on "normal" undisturbed sites. The rapid pedogenesis is partially attributed to greater leaching potentials caused by thick litter accumulations, which release larger amounts of organic acids than other sites, thereby accelerating development toward Spodosol morphology. Thin litter cover on mounds produces low amounts of organic acids. Leaching of organo-metallic complexes during the warm season is accomplished by a relatively few large, rain events, which effectively translocate more sesquioxides within pit soils than mound soils, due to more abundant organic acids and wetter initial soils.;During winter, mound soils often freeze because they are poorly insulated by litter and snow cover; pit soils usually remain unfrozen. Frozen mound soils are impermeable (concrete frost), whereas pit soils develop porous, granular frost. Whereas summer rains may leach all pedons to nearly comparable depths, snowmelt infiltration snowmelt is often blocked by frozen soil within mounds. Conversely, infiltration within pits and most undisturbed sites is unrestricted, resulting in maximal infiltration and leaching.;Buried wood and charcoal collected from within four mounds gave...
Keywords/Search Tags:Undisturbed, Sites, Mound, Soil, Pit
Related items