Monday, November 5, 2007 - 10:15 AM
104-5

Lithologic and Pedogenic Controls on Silica Biogeochemistry.

S.E. Melzer1, E.F. Kelly1, Oliver Chadwick2, C.M. Yonker1, A.K. Knapp3, A. Hartshorn4, Melinda D. Smith5, Richard W.S. Fynn6, and Kevin P. Kirkman6. (1) Dept of Soil and Crop Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, (2) University of California-Santa Barbara, university of California-Santa Barbara, Dept of Geography & Environmental Studies, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, (3) Dept of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, (4) Dept of Geography & Environmental Studies, University of California-Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, (5) Dept of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, (6) School of Biological and Conservation Sciences, University of Kwazulu-Natal at Pietermaritzburg, Scottsville, 3209, South Africa

Interest in the biogeochemistry of silicon among grass-dominated ecosystems has increased recently as soils underlying these terrestrial ecosystems appear to be a large reservoir of biogenic Si (BSi).  Importantly, quantifying and modeling the pools and fluxes of BSi in terrestrial systems will have a significant affect on carbon models as the biogeochemical behaviors of carbon and silicon are closely linked through marine diatom production. 

 The overall goal of this research was to assess the fundamental controls on BSi soil pools in grass-dominated ecosystems.  Our major research question was to assess if the climatic controls identified in North America are similar in South Africa despite differences in parent material, soil age, and evolutionary history.  To assess precipitation and parent material controls on BSi, we sampled grasses and soils (pedons) at 3 sites in Kruger National Park of South Africa that receive on average ca. 400, 600 and 750 mm of rainfall each year. We sampled plots on both fine (basaltic) and coarse (granitic) textured soils as these parent materials can be found side-by-side along a north-south precipitation gradient. We measured plant and soil pools of BSi from all sites and found that basalts contribute greater amounts of Si from weathering into the soil than do granites.  This lithologic control, however, is accompanied by soil age.  In sites with similar MAP and ANPP both the total Si and BSi in the older savanna grasslands of South Africa are lower relative to North American sites.  A greater proportion of BSi remains in the North American soils where the percent Si out flux is lower. In terms of the response of Si mobility to ecological drivers and evolutionary history on both continents, it is clear that frequent fire results in increased Si uptake by plants although the same relationship is not apparent in soils.  In both cases (plant and soil), BSi concentrations are higher in South African relative to North American sites.