Plant-induced soil changes: Processes and feedbacks -

Plant-induced soil changes: Processes and feedbacks

Nico van Breemen (Herausgeber)

Buch | Hardcover
252 Seiten
1998 | Reprinted from BIOGEOCHEMISTRY, 42:1-2, 1998
Springer (Verlag)
978-0-7923-5216-7 (ISBN)
160,49 inkl. MwSt
Written by soil scientists and ecologists, this book reviews how and why plants influence soils. It includes topics such as effects on mineral weathering, soil structure, and soil organic matter and nutrient dynamics, and case studies of soil-plant interactions in specific biomes and of secondary chemicals influencing nutrient cycling.
This book consists of papers presented at a symposium "PLANT-INDUCED SOIL CHANGES: PROCESSES AND FEEDBACKS" that was held during the American Society of Agronomy-Soil Science Society of America Annual Meeting in Indianapolis, November 4-8, 1996. The papers were also pub- of Biogeochemistry (Vol. 42, nos. 1 and 2, 1998). The lished in a special issue symposium was built on the growing realisation that plant-induced changes in soil feed back in various ways to natural vegetations, giving rise to a plethora of plant-soil interactions beyond the classical one-way cause-and-effect pathways plant-to-soil and soil-to-plant. The aim of this special issue is not in the first place to present new research findings, but to review and discuss the more holistic aspects of plant-soil interactions, providing more room for speculation than do most collections of research papers. After a general introduction which emphasises ecological and evolutionary aspects of plant-soil interac~ions (van Breemen and Finzi), three papers deal with particular effects of plants on soil properties: mineralogy (Kelly et al. ), soil structure (Angers and Caron) and soil fertility (Berendse).
Next, five papers take up plant-soil interactions in specific biomes: forests (Binkley and Giardina; Gobran et al. ), grasslands (Burke et al.; Epstein et al. ) and deserts (Schlesinger and Pilmanis). Two papers discuss plant-soil interactions via effects of differences in litter quality in specific ecosystems: California's pygmy forest (Northup et al. ) and the Alaskan Taiga (Schimel et al. ).

Plant—soil interactions: ecological aspects and evolutionary implications.- The effect of plants on mineral weathering.- Plant-induced changes in soil structure: Processes and feedbacks.- Effects of dominant plant species on soils during succession in nutrient-poor ecosystems.- Why do tree species affect soils? The Warp and Woof of tree—soil interactions.- Rhizospheric processes influencing the biogeochemistry of forest ecosystems.- Plant—soil interactions in temperate grasslands.- Plant functional type effects on trace gas fluxes in the shortgrass steppe.- Plant—soil interactions in deserts.- Polyphenols as regulators of plant—litter—soil interactions in northern California’s pygmy forest: A positive feedback?.- The role of balsam poplar secondary chemicals in controlling soil nutrient dynamics through succession in the Alaskan taiga.- The bio in aluminum and silicon geochemistry.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 31.8.1998
Reihe/Serie Developments in Biogeochemistry ; 4
Zusatzinfo VII, 252 p.
Verlagsort Dordrecht
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Biologie Botanik
Naturwissenschaften Biologie Ökologie / Naturschutz
Naturwissenschaften Geowissenschaften Geologie
ISBN-10 0-7923-5216-5 / 0792352165
ISBN-13 978-0-7923-5216-7 / 9780792352167
Zustand Neuware
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