Microspectroscopy reveals dust-derived apatite grains in acidic, highly-weathered Hawaiian soils

•Combination of novel bulk- and micro-spectroscopic techniques.•Transcontinental dust transport modeling.•Describe P species along a climatic gradient.•Discuss possible sources of dust-derived apatite. Dust deposition is an important source of phosphorus (P) to many ecosystems. However, there is lit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geoderma 2021-01, Vol.381, p.114681, Article 114681
Hauptverfasser: Vogel, Christian, Helfenstein, Julian, Massey, Michael S., Sekine, Ryo, Kretzschmar, Ruben, Beiping, Luo, Peter, Thomas, Chadwick, Oliver A., Tamburini, Federica, Rivard, Camille, Herzel, Hannes, Adam, Christian, Pradas del Real, Ana E., Castillo-Michel, Hiram, Zuin, Lucia, Wang, Dongniu, Félix, Roberto, Lassalle-Kaiser, Benedikt, Frossard, Emmanuel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Combination of novel bulk- and micro-spectroscopic techniques.•Transcontinental dust transport modeling.•Describe P species along a climatic gradient.•Discuss possible sources of dust-derived apatite. Dust deposition is an important source of phosphorus (P) to many ecosystems. However, there is little evidence of dust-derived P-containing minerals in soils. Here we studied P forms along a well-described climatic gradient on Hawaii, which is also a dust deposition gradient. Soil mineralogy and soil P forms from six sites along the climatic gradient were analyzed with bulk (X-ray diffraction and P K-edge X-ray absorption near edge structure) and microscale (X-ray fluorescence, P K-edge X-ray absorption near edge structure, and Raman) analysis methods. In the wettest soils, apatite grains ranging from 5 to 30 µm in size were co-located at the micro-scale with quartz, a known continental dust indicator suggesting recent atmospheric deposition. In addition to co-location with quartz, further evidence of dust-derived P included backward trajectory modeling indicating that dust particles could be brought to Hawaii from the major global dust-loading areas in central Asia and northern Africa. Although it is not certain whether the individual observed apatite grains were derived from long-distance transport of dust, or from local dust sources such as volcanic ash or windblown fertilizer, these observations offer direct evidence that P-containing minerals have reached surface layers of highly-weathered grassland soils through atmospheric deposition.
ISSN:0016-7061
1872-6259
DOI:10.1016/j.geoderma.2020.114681