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Influences of phosphate addition on fungal weathering of carbonate in the red soil from karst region.

Authors :
Tian, Da
Su, Mu
Zou, Xiang
Zhang, Liangliang
Tang, Lingyi
Geng, Yuanyuan
Qiu, Jingjing
Wang, Shimei
Gao, Hongjian
Li, Zhen
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Feb2021:Part 2, Vol. 755, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Carbonate in soil from karst region is a substantial carbon sink on Earth. Many karst regions are covered by P-deficient soil. This study evaluated the influences of phosphate addition on fungal weathering (by typical phosphate-solubilizing fungus Aspergillus niger) of carbonate in the soil with red color from karst region. Two weathering pathways were recognized, i.e., biochemical and biomechanical deterioration. The biochemical pathway was performed by dissolving carbonate via secreting organic acids. Meanwhile, the dominant organic acid, i.e., oxalic acid, induced the formation of calcium oxalate, which prevented the loss of Ca2+ cations. It was estimated that the ideal carbonate solubilization driven by geological fluorapatite and fungal weathering is up to 3.3% per year, based on the equation of 12 × (R Base + R PSF) × m × (A real /A PSF). Moreover, fungal weathering of carbonate is very sensitive to the solubility of phosphates. Phosphates supply essential P source for the fungal growth and subsequently raise water-soluble P content in the soil. The addition of bioapatite (a variety of natural apatite with relatively high solubility) elevated the value to 4.6% (a ~ 40% enhancement compared with FAp). This research hence elucidated the tight correlation between carbonate weathering and P supply. Inorganic C release driven by P availability and microbial weathering should be addressed in karst region. Unlabelled Image • A. niger can release abundant oxalic acids to prevent Ca2+ loss via the formation of Ca-oxalate. • Phosphate addition significantly enhances (up to ~5%) the fungal weathering rate of carbonate in soil. • The low solubility of FAp is the major drawback of P supply and bioweathering of minerals. • Both of biochemical and biomechanical deterioration contributes to fungal weathering of carbonate rocks. • C flux driven by P availability and microbial weathering should be addressed in karst region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
755
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
147831337
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142570