Principal component analysis of chemical properties of soil saturation extracts from an irrigated Mediterranean area: Implications for calcite equilibrium in soil solutions

Calcite equilibrium characterisation of soil solutions is needed in order to provide soil salinity modellers with reliable solubility constants in solutions where the hypothesis of equilibrium can be accepted. A total of 134 soil samples were taken from 39 sites at 2, 3, or 4 depths per site, down t...

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Autores principales: Visconti, Fernando, De-Paz, José M., Rubio, José L.
Formato: article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2017
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/4744
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author Visconti, Fernando
De-Paz, José M.
Rubio, José L.
author_browse De-Paz, José M.
Rubio, José L.
Visconti, Fernando
author_facet Visconti, Fernando
De-Paz, José M.
Rubio, José L.
author_sort Visconti, Fernando
collection ReDivia
description Calcite equilibrium characterisation of soil solutions is needed in order to provide soil salinity modellers with reliable solubility constants in solutions where the hypothesis of equilibrium can be accepted. A total of 134 soil samples were taken from 39 sites at 2, 3, or 4 depths per site, down to a maximum depth of 95 cm, during a survey in the irrigated agricultural area of the Segura River Lowland (SE Spain). Soil saturation extracts obtained from each sample were analysed for thirteen chemical properties: Na, NH(4), K, Mg, Ca, Cl, NO(2), NO(3), SO(4), alkalinity, chemical oxygen demand, and electrical conductivity. A principal component analysis (PCA) was then done on the correlation matrix from the log-transformed data set. Three principal components, accounting for 76% of the variance in the correlation matrix, were retained after eigenvector extraction. These components were interpreted as representing salinisation, soil superficiality as opposed to soil depth, and fertilisation status. Sodium, chloride, magnesium, calcium and sulphate concentrations were highly correlated with the first principal component and were interpreted as explaining the variance in electrical conductivity of the soil saturation extracts, and by proxy soil salinity. Alkalinity, pH, chemical oxygen demand, and nitrite were correlated with the second principal component. Nitrate, potassium and ammonium concentrations were correlated with the third principal component, and their variation in soil was independent of soil saturation extract salt content and soil depth. According to the interpretation of the second principal component, soil saturation extracts are further than the solutions in the saturated pastes from being in equilibrium with calcite. The calcite oversaturation status of soil saturation extracts is related to soil organic matter content. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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spelling ReDivia47442025-04-25T14:44:18Z Principal component analysis of chemical properties of soil saturation extracts from an irrigated Mediterranean area: Implications for calcite equilibrium in soil solutions Visconti, Fernando De-Paz, José M. Rubio, José L. Calcite equilibrium characterisation of soil solutions is needed in order to provide soil salinity modellers with reliable solubility constants in solutions where the hypothesis of equilibrium can be accepted. A total of 134 soil samples were taken from 39 sites at 2, 3, or 4 depths per site, down to a maximum depth of 95 cm, during a survey in the irrigated agricultural area of the Segura River Lowland (SE Spain). Soil saturation extracts obtained from each sample were analysed for thirteen chemical properties: Na, NH(4), K, Mg, Ca, Cl, NO(2), NO(3), SO(4), alkalinity, chemical oxygen demand, and electrical conductivity. A principal component analysis (PCA) was then done on the correlation matrix from the log-transformed data set. Three principal components, accounting for 76% of the variance in the correlation matrix, were retained after eigenvector extraction. These components were interpreted as representing salinisation, soil superficiality as opposed to soil depth, and fertilisation status. Sodium, chloride, magnesium, calcium and sulphate concentrations were highly correlated with the first principal component and were interpreted as explaining the variance in electrical conductivity of the soil saturation extracts, and by proxy soil salinity. Alkalinity, pH, chemical oxygen demand, and nitrite were correlated with the second principal component. Nitrate, potassium and ammonium concentrations were correlated with the third principal component, and their variation in soil was independent of soil saturation extract salt content and soil depth. According to the interpretation of the second principal component, soil saturation extracts are further than the solutions in the saturated pastes from being in equilibrium with calcite. The calcite oversaturation status of soil saturation extracts is related to soil organic matter content. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. 2017-06-01T10:10:53Z 2017-06-01T10:10:53Z 2009 JUL 15 2009 article Visconti, F., Miguel de Paz, J., L. Rubio, J. (2009). Principal component analysis of chemical properties of soil saturation extracts from an irrigated Mediterranean area: Implications for calcite equilibrium in soil solutions. Geoderma, 151(3-4), 407-416. 0016-7061 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/4744 10.1016/j.geoderma.2009.05.003 en openAccess Impreso
spellingShingle Visconti, Fernando
De-Paz, José M.
Rubio, José L.
Principal component analysis of chemical properties of soil saturation extracts from an irrigated Mediterranean area: Implications for calcite equilibrium in soil solutions
title Principal component analysis of chemical properties of soil saturation extracts from an irrigated Mediterranean area: Implications for calcite equilibrium in soil solutions
title_full Principal component analysis of chemical properties of soil saturation extracts from an irrigated Mediterranean area: Implications for calcite equilibrium in soil solutions
title_fullStr Principal component analysis of chemical properties of soil saturation extracts from an irrigated Mediterranean area: Implications for calcite equilibrium in soil solutions
title_full_unstemmed Principal component analysis of chemical properties of soil saturation extracts from an irrigated Mediterranean area: Implications for calcite equilibrium in soil solutions
title_short Principal component analysis of chemical properties of soil saturation extracts from an irrigated Mediterranean area: Implications for calcite equilibrium in soil solutions
title_sort principal component analysis of chemical properties of soil saturation extracts from an irrigated mediterranean area implications for calcite equilibrium in soil solutions
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/4744
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