Web Release Date: December 8,
Studies of the Compositions of Humic Acids from Amazonian Dark Earth Soils



ta E. Madari,
and

Embrapa Solos, R. Jardim Botânico, 1.024, Rio de Janeiro-RJ,
Brazil, 22460-000, Chemical and Environmental Sciences,
University of Limerick, Ireland, Instituto de Física de São
Carlos, Universidade de São Paulo, São Carlos-SP, Brazil,
Embrapa Semi-
rido Cx.P. 23. Petrolina-PE, Brazil,
56300-970, and Embrapa Arroz e Feijão, Cx.P. 179.
Santo Antônio de Goi
s-GO, Brazil, 75375-000
Received for review April 19, 2006
Revised manuscript received August 22, 2006
Accepted September 7, 2006
Abstract:
The compositions of humic acids (HAs) isolated from
cultivated and forested "Terra Preta de Índio" or Amazonian
Dark Earth soils (anthropogenic soils) were compared
with those from adjacent non-anthropogenic soils (control
soils) using elemental and thermogravimetric analyses,
and a variety of solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance
techniques. The thermogravimetric index, which indicates
the molecular thermal resistance, was greater for the
anthropogenic soils than for the control soils suggesting
polycyclic aromatic components in the former. The cultivated
anthropogenic soils were more enriched in C and depleted
in H than the anthropogenic soils under forest, as the
result of the selective degradation of aliphatic structures
and the possible enrichment of H-deficient condensed
aromatic structures. The combination of variable amplitude
cross-polarization (VACP) and chemical shift anisotropy
with total suppression of spinning sidebands experiments
with composite
pulses could be used to quantify the
aromaticity of the HAs from the anthropogenic soils. From
principal component analysis, using the VACP spectra, it
was possible to separate the different constituents of the
HAs, such as the carboxylated aromatic structures, from
the anthropogenic soils and plant derived compounds. The
data show that the HAs from anthropogenic soils have
high contents of aryl and ionisable oxygenated functional
groups, and the major functionalities from adjacent
control soils are oxygenated functional groups from labile
structures (carbohydrates, peptides, and with evidence
for lignin structures). The anthropogenic soils HAs can be
considered to be more recalcitrant, and with more
stable reactive functional groups which may, in part,
explain their more sustainable fertility due to the organic
matter contribution to the soil cation exchange capacity.
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