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Soils of Australasia. formation, human interactions, biology, and natural disasters. By Kate Edwards, Tyler Huntley, Kerry Malm and Brian Murtaugh. Introduction. What is Australasia Wide range of soil formation and orders Specific soil formations in New Zealand. Introduction.
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Soils of Australasia formation, human interactions, biology, and natural disasters By Kate Edwards, Tyler Huntley, Kerry Malm and Brian Murtaugh
Introduction • What is Australasia • Wide range of soil formation and orders • Specific soil formations in New Zealand
Introduction • Acidic soils in Australia • Dipterocarp forests throughout the region • Natural Disasters in Indonesia
Tongariro Volcanic Center • Located on New Zealand’s North Island. • Raw volcanic soil dominates the landscape which is formed in tephra also know as volcanic ash.
Time and Parent Material • Time: Raw volcanic soils are a very heterogeneous group of soils and are extremely young. • Parent Material: Tephras of rhyolite, dacite and andesite
Climate and Topography • Climate: Cold and high rainfalls. • Topography: Raw volcanic soil forms in the vicinity of the source volcano
Biota • Organisms: Most soil animals and micro-organisms are concentrated in the topsoil. • Plant Life: Vegetation rapidly recovers on volcanic soils.
Profile Characteristics • A horizon: is dark in color • B horizon:10-15cm thick • C horizon: is pale yellow-brown
Distinguishing features of Raw Volcanic Soils • Naturally low levels of organic matter • Generally coarse in texture • Weakly weathered • Highly susceptible to erosion • Low bulk density • Well drained, very high macroporosity
Acidic Soils of Australia Tyler Huntley
Acidic Sulfate • Where: SE SW Australia • Acid Subsoils 23 million hectares in Aus. • 1/3 of Aussi covered • Acid sulfate soils once made up the sea floor, • Geologically • pH levels
Agricultural • Increase in acidification • Soil nutrient uptake
Construction • corrode metal pipes and dissolve concrete. • foundations of buildings
Surface Water • Run-off • Consequences
Prevention • Identifying them • Liming • Loss of crop production
Lowland Dipterocarp forests Soil associations
General Background • Where: South East Asia • Climate: very warm temperatures • Growth: year round • Use: timber industry, land degradation issues • Stand characteristics: uneven aged, multi-layered • Soils: strongly acidic, infertile, vulnerable to surface erosion
Types of Soils • Ultisols – most common in SE Asia • Inceptisols • Very steep slopes • Oxisols • Characterized by • Morphology • Physiochemical properties • Clay mineralogy
Soil Textures • Primary factor for vertical distribution and storage of C, N, and P • Coarse - clay content <35% • Thicker A and E horizons • More roots and animals • Larger volume of coarse pores • Fine – clay content >50% • Mostly kaolinite
Soil Horizons • Typically A, Ag, Eg, E, Bt or Btg, Bg & C • No O layer • termites • A Horizon • 5 cm thick • Grayish with mottles edged with thin layers of iron oxide
Soil Horizons • E Horizon • 3-60 cm thick • Grayish and rust colored mottles • Clay coated in finer soils • Lower limit of major root penetration and animals • B Horizon • Argillic (shallower in fine soils) • C Horizon
Upper Horizons:Mechanical composition, bulk density and porosity • Clay eluviation and illuviation in every soil • Usually in fines • Bulk density increases with depth • Higher % coarse pores at surface • Higher % total pore space at surface • Water holding capacity correlated with total porosity
Upper Horizons:Nutrient Cycling • Highest storage of total C, N and P in the 0-150 cm of soil • Increase with amount of clay • Same with available N • Sandy soils • Large amt of C, not N • Exchangeable Mg and K correlated with clay • AMOUNTS STILL VARY GREATLY, EVEN WITH SIMILAR CLIMATE AND VEG
Charismatic Mega Fauna • Philippine Eagle • Flying lemur • Tarsier • Philippine Cockatoo • Flying foxes • Bats • Reptiles and amphibians
Climate • Tropical climate • Dry season June-September • Wet season December-March • Moderate temperatures • Large range of annual rainfall
Topography • Indonesia has a wide range of topographic features
Vegetation • Tropical plants • Flowering plants • Many trees
Soils • Andosol (Andisols) • Very fertile • Used for horticulture and plantations • Regosols (Inceptisols) • Quartz sand not suitable for dry-land farming • Grumosols • High Ca & clay content • Used for crops in lowlands
Latosol • Tropical rainforests • Lateritic • Tropical • High Al & Fe oxides • Hydromorph (Oxisols) • Alluvial • Podsol • Highly leached • Coniferous forests
What is a landslide? • Material moving down a slope due to gravity • Many possible triggers • Look like an avalanche • 3 types • Slump • Flow • Lahar
Indonesia Mt. Semeru
Conclusion • The soils of New Zealand’s Central North Island is mostly volcanic in origin • Farmer’s crop yields are limited by the acidity of the sub soils in SE/SW Australia
Conclusion • Subsoils are as important as topsoil in tropical Ultisols • Tropical and volcanic soils in combination with precipitation leads to more frequently occurring landslides