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Hydric Soils. Wetland criteria. Hydrology Hydric soils Hydrophytic plants. Hydric soil. soil that is saturated, flooded, or ponded long enough during the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part.
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Wetland criteria • Hydrology • Hydric soils • Hydrophytic plants
Hydric soil • soil that is saturated, flooded, or ponded long enough during the growing seasonto develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part. • Oxygen is removed from groundwater by respiration of microbes, roots, soil fauna • Biological zero = 5°C
Why is “during growing season” important part of definition? • If wet period is during COLD time of year (too cold for microbial growth and plant root respiration), might not have anaerobic conditions. • It is anaerobic conditions that cause a soil to be hydric, not just saturation!!!
Hydric soils support growth and regeneration of hydrophytic plants.
Hydric Soils and Taxonomy • Histosols • (all Histosols except Folists) • (all Histels except Folistels) • Aquic suborders and subgroups • Definition of aquic soil moisture regime: “reducing regime in soil virtually free of dissolved oxygen because it is saturated. Some soils are saturated at times while dissolved oxygen is present, either because the water is moving or the environment is unfavorable for microorganisms; such a regime is NOT considered aquic”. Organic soils made up mostly of forest litter’ not saturated
Aquic Conditions: • Periodic or continuous saturation • Redoximorphic features • Verify by measuring saturation or reduction
Exception to Aquic conditions: • Artificial drainage • Removal of free water from soils with aquic conditions • Artificially drained soils are included with aquic soils • Because soil Taxonomy is based on soil GENESIS and minimizes human disturbance • Pertains to Hydric soils also
Artificially wet soils are considered hydric • Artificially “dry” (drained) soils are considered hydric
Types of saturation • endosaturation: all soil layers sat’d to 2 m depth • Episaturation: sat’d layers in upper 2 m (perched) • Anthric saturation: controlled flooding (rice, cranberries)
Hydric soil indicators: • Color • Chroma 1or 2 or gley (Fe++2 grey or green) • May have redox concentrations or concretions • Sulfidic materials (odor of rotten eggs) • Sulfate reduction
Plate 30 Dark (black) humic accumulation and gray humus depletion spots in the A horizon are indicators of a hydric soil. Water table is 30 cm below the soil surface.
Figure 7.11 The relationship between the occurrence of some soil features and the annual duration of water-saturated conditions. The absence of iron concentrations (mottles) with colors of chroma >4, and the presence of strong expressions of the other features are indications that a soil may be hydric. [Adapted from Veneman et al. (1999)]
List of hydric soils http://soils.usda.gov Click on hydric soils
Oxidized rhizosphere • In some poorly aerated soils: • Red, oxidized iron in root channels • Oxygen diffused out of plant roots • Some plants transport oxygen through aerenchyma tissue in stems and leaves to roots (hydrophytic plants)
Plate 29 Oxidized (red) root zones in the A and E horizons indicate a hydric soil. They result from oxygen diffusion out from roots of wetland plants having aerenchyma tissues (air passages).