August 4, 2017
Journal Article

Imaging and Analytical Approaches for Characterization of Soil Mineral Weathering

Abstract

Soil minerals weathering is the primary natural source of nutrients necessary to sustain productivity in terrestrial ecosystems. Soil microbial communities increase soil mineral weathering and mineral-derived nutrient availability through physical and chemical processes. Rhizosphere, the zone immediately surrounding plant roots, is a biogeochemical hotspot with microbial activity, soil organic matter production, mineral weathering, and secondary phase formation all happening in a small temporally ephemeral zone of steep geochemical gradients. The detailed exploration of the micro-scale rhizosphere is essential to our better understanding of large-scale processes in soils, such as nutrient cycling, transport and fate of soil components, microbial-mineral interactions, soil erosion, soil organic matter turnover and its molecular-level characterization, and predictive modeling.

Revised: April 17, 2020 | Published: August 4, 2017

Citation

Dohnalkova A., B.W. Arey, T. Varga, M.D. Miller, and L. Kovarik. 2017. Imaging and Analytical Approaches for Characterization of Soil Mineral Weathering. Microscopy and Microanalysis 23, no. S1:2172-2173. PNNL-SA-126363. doi:10.1017/S1431927617011527