Scientific Program

Conference Series Ltd invites all the participants across the globe to attend Annual Congress on Soil Sciences Madrid, Spain.

Day :

  • Soil Biology
Location: Madrid, Spain
Speaker

Chair

Kelly T Morgan,

University of Florida,USA

Speaker

Co-Chair

Nataliya P Kirillova

Moscow State University, Russia

Session Introduction

Cristina Menta

University of Parma, Italy

Title: Soil biodiversity: A pivotal element that sustains soil functions

Time : 11:45-12:10

Speaker
Biography:

Cristina Menta is a Researcher in Soil Biology at Parma University, Italy. She obtained her PhD in Animal Biology, she is titular Professor of Zoology course at Parma University, and Scientific Director of the Natural History Museum of Parma University. She is coordinating as soil fauna expert and several research projects related to the characterization of soil fauna in natural and degraded areas. With her team, she has participated to the development of a new biological soil quality index (QBS-ar), based on soil micro-arthropod community, applied at international scale. She has published more than 50 papers in national and international scientific journal, chapters of book, and she has taken part in national and international congresses. 

Abstract:

During the last century, soils have been over-exploited by industrial and agriculture developments in many parts of the world. Soils play a key role in the maintenance of ecosystem services and their preservation, in relation to human impacts and long-term processes induced by climate change, has become a priority topic. Besides the obvious implications for agro-sylvo-pastoral production, soils take part in the provision of other services such as carbon sequestration, nutrient cycling, protection of plants from pests, genetic resources, and other functions. A wide range of ecosystem services depends on soils and the functions performed by soil biota can have an impact at the global scale, with the consequences for global climate. The complex processes carried out by soil organisms have significant effects on ecosystem operation, soil quality, and yields and crops. The still in part unknown relationships between soil living community and ecosystem functions are extremely intricate and the study of these relationships is essential for understanding soil ecological functions and their ability to provide services. The need to adopt soil biodiversity monitoring programs is induced by both the increasing pressures on soil biodiversity and the limited knowledge obtained up to now. It is widely reported that the planet is currently losing biodiversity and it can be assumed that this process is occurring to the variety of organisms living in the soil. Finally, the increasing recognition of problems derived from soil degradation has contributed to identifying soil biota research as a priority in soil quality assessments.

  • Soil Erosion
Location: Madrid, Spain
Speaker
Biography:

Edwige Vannier has her expertise in Data Analysis and Processing and her interest in Soil Science. Her research focuses on soil surface roughness characterization and modeling. She graduated from the Ecole Nationale Supérieur de l’Electronique et de ses Applications, France in 1997. She received her PhD degree in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Paris-Est Créteil in 2001. From 2003, she is an Assistant Professor at the University of Versailles-St Quentin. 

Abstract:

Statement of the Problem: Analysis of soil roughness is a key point in soil sciences for soil preparation as well as for impact studies on overland flow and erosion. Soil roughness changes with time, because of tillage and rainfall. Roughness is usually estimated by various indices, computed on measured profiles or images of elevations. Another approach is focusing on soil clodiness, either by sieving or by image segmentation. The purpose of this study is to follow the evolution of clods under rainfall with digital elevation model (DEM) recording and image processing.
Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: Artificial soil surfaces were made in the laboratory with silt loam soil topped by pre-sieved clods. They were then subjected to controlled artificial rainfalls, and DEM were recorded at each stage of the surfaces. We performed automatic clod segmentation and measurement of the volume of individual cloud.
Findings: The clods of diameter superior to 12 mm show swelling (volume increase) and erosion (volume decrease), with cumulated rainfall. These two phenomena seem to be size dependent. When modeling volume decrease by an exponential function, the slope parameter shows a hyperbolic behavior, as a function of a mean volume of the clod subset.
Conclusion & Significance: Monitoring of clod volume with cumulated precipitation with the help of DEM measurements can differentiate the dynamics of clod depending on their size. These techniques improve the usual roughness description and allow for a better understanding of the processes. 
Figure 1: Evolution of the mean clod volume under rainfall effect for subsets of increasing clod volume

  • Soil Microbiology
Location: Madrid, Spain

Session Introduction

Yosef Steinberger

Bar-llan University, Israel

Title: Orchard floor management effect on soil microbial community

Time : 12:35-13:00

Speaker
Biography:

Yosef Steinberger is a Professor of Ecology at Bar-Ilan University, Israel. One of his main interests is in the relationship of soil invertebrates and detrital food web structure to primary production in arid, semi-arid, and agroecosystems. Other interests include the monitoring of rangeland conditions (health), assessment of the success of rehabilitation efforts in disturbed rangelands and biological management of soil ecosystems for sustainable agriculture. He has supervised over 40 students in MSc, PhD, and Postdoctoral Fellows and has published over 200 publications in refereed journals.

Abstract:

Soil erosion by water is a major environmental threat to sustainability and productive capacity of agriculture. The previous study had shown that soil erosion harms crops because of a reduction in the availability of water, and thus brings damage to nutrients, organic matter that may affect soil biota community. The selection of a given practice in agriculture has key impacts on the soil functioning e.g. soil degradation processes, aggregate slaking and dispersion of clay particles, which then migrate and clog soil pores immediately beneath the surface. To overcome this essential threat, it is more and more common to mulch the soil in orchards and vineyards by plant and plants residue. In the previous study showed that inter-cropping reduced the runoff maximum discharge by 60-80%, reduced the cumulative runoff by 70-90%, and decreased soil erosion and runoff by 95%. Moreover, using native vegetation as a proxy of cover crops between the rows, we were able to increase both the herbs and arthropods biodiversity, and maintain the development and heath of the orchard trees. In the present preliminary study, the main objective was to assess the effect of different agricultural management practices (soil cover in an orchard) on soil microbial community structure evaluated as abundance, biomass, and functional diversity. Three different treatments were selected covering the orchard floor with: woodchips; annual winter cover crops and control (not cover). Thus, the application of different cover appears to be a sustainable management practice that enhances organic carbon, microbial biomass and activity and fungal abundances, thereby changing the microbial community structure. The present study had elucidated the importance of the interplay between soil cover and abiotic condition on soil microfloral community which during their activity may have a significant effect on nutrient supply improving yield potential.

Ming Pei You

University of Western Australia, Australia

Title: Critical factors driving soilborne root disease epidemics in clovers revealed and explained

Time : 14:00-14:25

Speaker
Biography:

Ming Pei You has wide areas of expertise across soilborne fungal and oomycete pathogens, their aetiology, epidemiology, disease control by identification and application of host resistance and of cultural and chemical methodologies and in integrated disease management in relation to forages, broad-acre crops and horticultural crops. She also has conducted research in China on several fungal pathogens currently exotic to Australia. She has strong experience and understanding in pathogen epidemiological drivers, in fungal taxonomy, in defining the nature of soilborne complexes, particularly in relation to characterizing pathogen sub-specific variation within pathogen populations.

Abstract:

Subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum) is a critical pasture legume in Mediterranean regions of southern Australia and regions with Mediterranean-type climates in Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia, North America, and South America. Damping-off and root disease, caused by a complex of pathogens, particularly Pythium irregulare, Phytophthora clandestina, Aphanomyces trifolii and Rhizoctonia solani, is devastating across most of 20m ha of clover pastures in southern Australia. Studies were conducted to define how environmental factors namely temperature, soil type, moisture and nutrition as well as host variety, influence the severity of damping-off and root disease and consequent productivity in clover pastures under challenge by these pathogens. Relationships were statistically modelled using linear and generalized linear models and boosted regression trees. Modelling found complex relationships between explanatory variables and the extent of damping-off and root rot for each of the four pathogens. Linear modelling identified high-level (4 or 5-way) significant interactions for each response variable (emergence, tap and lateral root disease index, dry shoot and root weight). Furthermore, all explanatory variables temperature, soil, moisture, nutrition, variety were found significant as part of some interaction within these models. A second approach to modelling using boosted regression trees provided support for and helped clarify the complex nature of the relationships found in linear models. All explanatory variables showed significant relative influence on each of the five response variables. All models indicated differences due to soil type, with lowest weights, least emergence, as well as most disease for loam soil compared with a sand-based soil. Modelling helped reveal the complex nature of how fluctuating soil temperature, moisture and nutrition conditions, along with soil type and variety, all interact to determine damping-off and root disease severity in clover pastures and the consequent poor persistence and lack of productivity of subterranean clover pastures. For the first time, these studies explain the variations occurring across seasons, soils, geographic locations and varieties in terms of the severity and impact of soilborne root diseases.
 
 
Figure 1 a-e. Example of effect of environment factors (moisture, temperature, nutrition, soil type, variety) and their interactions on: a) clover emergence rate, b) tap root disease, c) lateral root disease, d) dry root weight, and e) dry shoot weight in presence of soilborne pathogens.

  • Soil Water Management
Location: Madrid, Spain

Session Introduction

Peter W Sale

La Trobe University, Australia

Title: Harvesting rainfall in dense clay subsoils to increase yields of rain-fed crops

Time : 14:25-14:50

Speaker
Biography:

Peter W Sale has carried out his research for over 30 years to address constraints that limit the productivity of farming systems in eastern and southern Australia. His initial work investigated slow-release P fertilizers for legume-based pastures and he became Lead Investigator in the National Reactive Phosphate Rock Project during the 1990s. Work on the form of applied P changed to the impact of P supply under abiotic stress, focusing on how pasture legumes under water deficit stress respond to P availability. Research then began on how to ameliorate subsoil constraints in cropping land in the Victorian high rainfall zone. This followed requests from grain producers who grew disappointing, low-yielding crops when dry periods occurred during the spring. Dense, dispersive clay subsoils, that restricted root growth and stored little plant-available water, were implicated. Research projects since 2005, on ameliorating these constraints, led to the development of the practice known as subsoil manuring.

Abstract:

Yields of managed agricultural crops relate directly to the soil water taken up by their roots and transpired through their leaves. The availability of this water for rain-fed crops depends on the rainfall and the soil’s ability to capture and store the rain for use by the crop. Unfortunately, there are many soils with dense impermeable clay subsoils that have limited capacity to capture and store rainfall. Past attempts to ameliorate these subsoils have failed. Field experiments were therefore carried out across the high rainfall zone (>500 mm annual rainfall) of Victoria, Australia with the aim of ameliorating the constraints posed by these subsoils. The key finding was that deep-banding of high rates of nutrient-rich organic amendment, into the dense, dispersive clay subsoil, a practice known as subsoil manuring, transformed the subsoil into a friable, aggregated soil. Pore-space and permeability increased after one crop and large, consistent and profitable increases in the yield of wheat and canola crops, were measured over four consecutive crops. The improved yields were associated with enhanced nutrient uptake and the increased use of subsoil water by the crops. Crop responses resulted when preceding rainfall was sufficient to replenish subsoil water and when one or more rainfall events occurred during the spring months, as crops filled their grain. The improvement in crop productivity is attributed to the increased capture and storage of rainfall in the subsoil, and its use by crops during their critical pre-flowering, flowering and grain-fill periods. Increased nutrient supply from the mineralizing organic amendment during these periods also contributed to the crop response. Soils with dense clay subsoils occur in many countries. They may well respond to this practice and grow more resilient and productive rain-fed crops, as rainfall becomes more variable.

Figure 1. Transformation of the physical structure of a dense, dispersive clay subsoil, four years after deep-banding 20 t/ha of nutrient-rich organic amendment, at a depth of 30-40 cm. Photos show untreated subsoil (left) and treated subsoil (right).

  • Pedology
Location: Madrid, Spain
Speaker
Biography:

Nataliya P Kirillova has her expertise in developing digital soil maps and evaluation of soil horizons color. Her match method (MM) was developed to create a digital fine-scale soil map and uses the indicative soil–landscape relationships. Accurate soil mapping relates to the correct classification based on soil horizons description. The study of the database that contains information on 800 profiles of the soils from the southern taiga subzone shows that more than 70% of the soil horizons are identified by color. That was the reason to develop the rapid and effective approaches for quantitative soil color evaluation.

 

Abstract:

Statement of the Problem: The physical characterization of soil horizons based on color is a key diagnostic method in the description of soil profiles, and has been integrated in to diagnostic keys such as the world reference base for soil resources. The Munsell color system has been the primary qualitative or semi-quantitative mean to describe soil color. The purpose of this study is to explore the feasibility of using flatbed scanners and digital cameras to derive colorimetrically accurate images and data of soil samples, and to replace semi-quantitative Munsell chart comparison, or more expensive spectrophotometers.

Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: Flatbed scanners have been used previously for colorimetric characterization of rocks and sediments. We undertook a series of calibration/characterization steps to optimize the colorimetric accuracy of two commercially available flatbed scanners and a digital camera. The basic principle underlying our approach is to characterise and calibrate digital devices using a variety of colour charts/targets. We tested the accuracy of these calibrations through analysis of a soil sample set containing 161 spectrophotometrically analyzed soils.

Conclusion & Significance: With careful calibration, scanners and digital cameras can be used to measure soil color with an accuracy close to that achievable with spectrophotometers, and hence to replace applying Munsell charts to evaluate soil color.

Speaker
Biography:

Lidija Galović is an Geologist who started her scientific carrier as a Geochemist dealing with Environmental Geochemistry. She mainly focused on Mineralogy and Geochemistry of recent soils, she developed as a Paleosol Investigator with expertise in Geochemistry and Mineralogy of quaternary loess/paleosol sections in the Danubius area. Her interest spreads on studying other quaternary sediments as a PI of the Project “4425 Standardization and Applied Investigation of Quaternary Sediments in Croatia” funded by Croatian Science Foundation and as a team member of the project on the Review and Harmonization of the International Quaternary Map, scale 1:2.5 Million (IQUAME 2500), coordinated by BGR under the auspices of the CGMW (Commission of the Geological Map of the Word, Sub-Commission Europe) and with support of the International Association for Quaternary Research INQUA-SACCOM (Commission for Stratigraphy and Geochronology). Nowadays her focus is on lacustrine sediments/soils in the Dinaric karstic part of Croatia.

Abstract:

Statement of the Problem: Six pedological profiles were analyzed overlying the five typical lithological units on the Medvednica Mountain to determine the effect of aeolian additions to the soil composition, as well as the possible influence of relief, vegetation cover, and anthropogenic input on the dynamics of pedogenesis.

Methodology: Bedrock composition was defined using petrographic (thin sections) and chemical (major and trace element contents) analyses, whereas pedological, sedimentological and geochemical characteristics of six cross-sections were determined by chemical (major and trace element contents), mineralogical (modal analysis), and grain size analyses.

Findings: Soils developed on sedimentary bedrock (Mollic Rendzic Leptosols (Calcaric) and Albic Luvisol (Sceletic)) mostly originate from weathering of siliciclastic detritus that was exposed to oxidization before diagenesis. Furthermore, soils on metasiltstone, marble and lithothamnium limestone exhibit similar modal and geochemical composition and element distribution across the soil profile. In contrast, soils developed on igneous bedrock originate mostly from weathering of minerals of the first weathering cycle and thus abound with chemically less resistant minerals and less mobile elements. However, all profiles contain higher concentrations of lead with respect to bedrock, indicating airborne contamination.

Conclusion: Soils developed on the sedimentary rocks mostly originate from weathering of siliciclastic detritus that was exposed to oxidization before diagenesis of the bedrock. Thus, the soil was depleted in all chemical components that were unstable in subaerial conditions. After diagenesis, chemical composition of the soil did not alter substantially, or the changes were reversible. Therefore, soils on metasiltstone, marble and bioclastic calcarenite have similar modal and geochemical composition and element distribution in the soil profiles. As a contrast, soils developed on orthometamorphite bedrock originate mostly from the weathering of minerals of the first weathering cycle, which is why these contain chemically less resistant minerals and mobile elements.

Ivan G Torre

Technical University of Madrid, Spain

Title: Scaling properties of soil images
Biography:

Iván G Torre is pursuing his third year of PhD in Physics of Complex Systems at Technical University of Madrid (UPM). He has a Predoctoral fellow with the Department of Applied Mathematics of UPM, Spain. He has been studying the structure of soil porosity in collaboration with the Group of Complex Systems of UPM and with the Research Center for the Management of Agricultural and Environmental Risks.

Abstract:

Fractal geometry has been increasingly applied to quantify soil structure using fractal parameters due to the complexity of the soil structure and thanks to the advances in computer technology. Mass dimension fractal analysis can be implemented in a binary image, which in general is displaying two phases: pore and solid. However, it has been shown that there is variability in the local porosity, which could be better studied using multifractal analysis (MFA). This type of study has been increasingly applied to quantify soil structure and is becomingly popular. We have applied two different techniques of MFA: box counting (BC) and gliding box (GB). The first one BC combines pixels to form larger, mutually exclusive boxes each containing a different set of pixels, while GB constructs samples by gliding a box of a certain size over the grid map in all possible directions. We show that there are some advantages and handicaps in both methods. From a CT-scan 3D image of a soil aggregate sample, three slices from each main direction have been selected. Then, for each slide we have computed using GB and BC, the mass function, the generalized dimension and the multifractal spectrum. All images analyzed presented a multiscaling character pointing out that the lower grey values are mainly influencing the scaling behaviour. The multiscaling nature of these images suggests using these algorithms as a basis to create synthetic images for testing thresholding algorithms. 

Figure 1: On the left: visualization of some slices from the three main directions of the soil sample used in the study. On the right: Multifractal spectra of all the 2D slices (both above and lower left), and the 3D sample (lower right). Blue circles, red boxes and green triangles corresponds to different slices in each direction. 

  • Soil fertility
Location: Madrid, Spain
Speaker

Chair

Bodoque J M

University of Castilla-La Mancha,Spain

Co-Chair

Nataliya P Kirillova

Moscow State University, Russia

Biography:

Abstract:

Biofertilizers are fertilizing products containing living microorganisms that, when applied to the soil or directly to a seed, colonize the rhizosphere and/or the plant promoting growth by increasing the availability of nutrients. Biofertilizers may improve the bioavailability of nutrients through natural processes such as biological nitrogen fixation, phosphorus solubilization, or through the synthesis of growth promoting substances. Organic fertilizers enriched with heterotrophic free-living nitrogen-fixing microorganisms have recently appeared on the market, seeking to enhance nitrogen fixation by placing the microorganisms directly in the food substrate. However, these nitrogen-fixing microorganisms are ubiquitous in agricultural soils, which allow question of the usefulness of enriching the organic fertilizers in such microbes. Unless the placement of the microorganisms next to the food substrate can give them competitive advantages and increase the biological nitrogen fixation. Field and pot experiments were carried out to compare the performance of two organic fertilizers enriched with free-living nitrogen-fixing microorganisms with other organic and mineral fertilizers. A sequence of horticultural crops (Lettuce-Lettuce-Turnip) was repeated for two years in the same field plots and pots. In the third year, barley was grown without fertilization to assess the residual effect of the fertilizers. Anion exchange membranes were used to monitor nitrate-nitrogen in the soil and plant dry biomass and nitrogen concentration in plant tissues to assess plant nutrient uptake and nitrogen use efficiency. Biofertilizers displayed results lower than mineral fertilizers but higher than organic fertilizers without microorganisms’ addition.

M Angelo Rodrigues

Polytechnic Institute of Bragança, Portugal

Title: Eighteen years of research on soil management systems in rainfed olive groves

Time : 15:05-15:30

Speaker
Biography:

M Ângelo Rodrigues has obtained his PhD degree in Edaphic and Environmental Sciences at the University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, Portugal in 2000. He has coordinated and/or participated in two dozen National and International research projects. He has published 130 scientific papers (31 in ISI/JCR journals), book chapters and technical reports. He has been Deputy Director of the School of Agriculture of IPB and President of the scientific committee of the Master’s program of Agroecology at the same institution. He was Vice-Coordinator of the Mountain Research Centre and Vice-Delegate of the Order of Engineers of the district of Bragança, Portugal.

Abstract:

Despite the increased acreage of high-density irrigated orchards, traditional rainfed olive groves maintain huge social importance. While in irrigated orchards cover cropping is generalized, in the rainfed groves the ground continues to be tilled or maintained bare by using herbicides. Cover cropping is important as is an effective mean of reducing soil erosion. However, the covers consume water which can severely reduce olive yields. Over the last 18 years, experimental work has been done in searching for a solution for these orchards. This work summarizes the results obtained in several field trials, which included several soil management treatments, such as conventional tillage, bare soil by using residual or post-emergence herbicides, natural vegetation mowed or grazed, legumes of erect habit grown as green manures and self-reseeding annual pasture legumes. The results indicate that withdrawing tillage and allowing the development of the root system significantly increases olive yield. Cover crops of natural vegetation control soil erosion and improve several soil fertility parameters but significantly reduce olive yield through excessive competition for water. Green manures are difficult to manage since they require be sowing and incorporating into the soil by tillage. If the green manures are managed as mulching it causes significant nitrogen losses to the atmosphere. In these orchards the theoretical model that aggregate the best results is the grown of very early-maturing self-reseeding annual legumes. These plants provide enough protection of the soil, fix nitrogen in rates able to maintain the trees at a nutrition levels higher than the application of 60 kg N ha-1 year-1 and ensures high olive yields due to the little competition for water. These covers proved to be the only way to make profitable organic farming, an interesting alternative for these low input agricultural systems.
 

  • Soil mechanics
Location: Madrid, Spain

Session Introduction

Kamel Bezih

Mostefa Ben Boulaid University, Algeria

Title: Deterministic and reliability analysis of RC bridges including soil-structure interaction

Time : 10:25-10:50

Speaker
Biography:

Kamel Bezih has graduated with a Master research and specialization in mechanical of soil and rock, from Pierre and Marie Curie University (Paris 6), France in 2002. In addition, a Magister degree in Civil Engineering, from University of Batna, Algeria in 2004, and PhD degree in Structure and Geomaterials from Mostefa Ben Boulaid University (Batna 2), Algeria in 2017. His research interests include numerical modeling of structure, geotechnical modeling tools, the mechanical behavior of soil, sol-structure interaction and the evaluation of the reliability of structures in Civil Engineering. He has also participated in several national and international conferences.

Abstract:

The objective of the present research is to show and to quantify the importance of soil parameter uncertainties on the redistribution of internal forces in RC bridges, as well as their effect on the safety assessment of these structures. In this paper, a reliability-mechanical approach was developed to study the effect of soil-structure interaction for RC bridges. The modeling of soil-structure interaction is incorporated in the mechanical model of RC continuous beam, by considering nonlinear elastic supports. The deterministic and reliability analysis allows us to evaluate the safety of the RC bridge regarding the soil parameter uncertainties. The numerical analysis allows us to evaluate the safety of the RC bridge regarding the soil parameter uncertainties. Furthermore, the obtained results indicate that soil–structure interaction effects and uncertainty of soil parameters should be considered in the reliability assessment of RC structures. This analysis can have significant impact on the design rules of redundant RC structures, especially when large soil uncertainties are involved.

Speaker
Biography:

Shaqour F has completed his PhD in Engineering Geology from Leeds University of UK. He has many years of experience in teaching undergraduate and post graduate students in Australian Universities and overseas with proven research track record and management of research and engineering projects. He has published high standard research articles in reputed international journals. Currently his research is on improvement of clay soils using cement dust, lime and geopolymerization. He has strong technical background on Engineering Geology, Hydrogeology, Engineering Materials and, with excellent written and oral communication skills. He has reviewed many articles to the Journal of Engineering Geology and other journals on various geotechnical aspects including soft soils and clays.

Abstract:

Statement of the problem: Cemented calcrete soil is commonly present in semi-arid areas and can form a good construction material as road bases, however wetting can cause distress problems. Such a calcrete deposit is available in North Jordan and has not been characterized for angle of internal friction and cohesion under dry and wet conditions.
 
Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: Direct shear tests were carried out on naturally cemented calcrete soil and artificially cemented sand following multi stage test procedure to determine their angle of internal friction and cohesion. Both undisturbed and reconstituted samples of the calcrete soil have been tested. Un-cemented sand is also tested to obtain reference strength parameters for comparison purposes. Each sample was sheared until failure, at an initial normal load which then increased incrementally for three additional stages.
 
Findings: The first peaks of the multistage testing on naturally cemented calcrete soil showed a friction angle between 31o and 63o and cohesion between 10 to 150 KPa, while artificially cemented sand gave values between 32o and 70o and cohesion ranging from 7 kPa to 200 kPa. Later peaks of artificially cemented sand and naturally cemented calcrete soil gave angle of internal friction of 35o, like those of un-cemented sand and reconstituted calcrete due to the breakdown of the bonding after the first stage of shearing.
 
Conclusion & Significance: The naturally cemented calcrete proved to possess high shear strength that makes them good foundation soils and suitable as road bases; however, they lose a considerable percentage of their strength upon reworking and wetting. Recommendations are made to determine the compaction characteristics and consider the influence of wetting on the shear strength of calcrete deposit. 

Speaker
Biography:

Erik R Christensen is a distinguished Professor Emeritus of Environmental Engineering. He has edited a book on contaminated aquatic sediments and co-authored the book Physical and Chemical Processes in the Aquatic Environment (Wiley, 2014) with An Li. He has been an Associate Editor for the Journal of Great Lakes Research and the ASCE Journal of Environmental Engineering, and published over 90 peer reviewed journal articles. He is a fellow of the American Society of Civil Engineers.

Abstract:

Statement of the Problem: Classical principal component analysis (PCA) is useful to separate anthropogenic and geogenic sources of trace elements in surface soil and moss. However, while mass input (µg/g) of trace elements can be determined by positive matrix factorization (PMF), this cannot readily be done by PCA. Also, classical PCA can be sensitive to minor changes in input data. We considered here datasets for 464 stations in mainland Norway and more than 21 trace elements including Pb, Cd, Ag, As, and Hg and several rare earth elements. PMF scores for individual stations were plotted, and PCA with CLR transformation was tested to check robustness and to see if significant factors were missed.
Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: Surface soil and moss (Hylocomium splendens) samples were collected all over mainland Norway from open air sites. Chemical and statistical analyses were conducted as described previously.
Findings: PMF factor contributions (scores) of anthropogenic factors from dated moss samples with high levels of Pb, Cd, Cr, Co, As, Hg at Svanvik near the Russian border confirm the influence of a Russian copper - nickel smelter. A much smaller increase is seen in the soil samples. Using CLR transformation with PCA, increased robustness is reflected by the fact that all five factors each have near-equivalent PMF factors, which is not the case for PCA without CLR transformation. However, scores are noisy and have significant negatives. Classical PCA on soil samples produces an Ag, Hg factor at Ulefoss, along with a distinct Eu factor free of Ag and Hg (PC5), both not seen with the CLR transformation.
Conclusion & Significance: PMF and PCA factor scores at individual stations such as Svanvik or Ulefoss can be an important adjunct to score maps in identifying pollution sources and PCA with CLR transformation provide more robust factors, however, at the possible expense of missing significant and more distinct factors.
 
 

  • Soil Microbiology
Location: Madrid, Spain
Speaker
Biography:

Hui-Zhen Qiu has her expertise in teaching and scientific research in the field of Plant Nutrition and Fertilization for more than thirty-five years in Gansu Agricultural University. She has focused her research work both in nutrition regulation of potato and rhizosphere processes and management of continuous potato monoculture in the past ten years. She and her group have revealed the mechanisms of the obstacles from continuous potato monoculture, and have established a set of technologies for managing rhizosphere microbiome to improve potato plant health and productivity, based on organic fertilizer and PGPRs.

 

Abstract:

Continuous potato monoculture has been a big problem in potato production in Gansu Province, west China. Long term field experiments were carried out to reveal the mechanism of obstacles from continuous potato monoculture. Soils along a seven-year gradient of potato monoculture were collected and microbial communities and populations were characterized using the approaches of PCR-DGGE, and high throughput pyrosequencing approaches. The principal findings are as follows: the diversity (HShannon) and richness (SChao1) indices of bacterial community were linearly decreased over time and corresponded to a decline of potato tuber yield decline and the disease incidence increase. Second, soil bacterial and fungal communities exhibited differential responses to the potato monoculture, the overall soil bacterial communities were shaped by potato monoculture, Acidobacteria and Nitrospirae were linearly decreased over time in abundance. Fusarium sambucim, Fusarium solani, and Rhizoctonia solani the major soil-borne pathogen-associated fungal genus substantially detected were linearly increased over time in abundance. Molecular ecological network analysis tool was used to study the interactions and network organizations of fungal communities in yield-invigorating (healthy,1-3 years’ continuous potato monoculture) and -debilitating (diseased, 4-7 years’) soils induced by prolonged potato monoculture, based on the relative abundances of internal transcribed spacer sequences derived using pyrosequencing. The results shown that the healthy network had more number of functionally interrelated operational taxonomic units (OTUs) than the diseased one; healthy network contained 6 (4%) generalist OTUs whereas the diseased contained only 1 (0.6%) marginal generalist OTU; and majority (55%) of OTUs in healthy soils were stimulated by a certain set of soil variables but the majorities (63%) in diseased soils were inhibited(Fig.2), which suggested that a healthy community was a better organized or a better operated community than the diseased one; a healthy soil was a soil with variables that encouraged majority of fungi whereas a diseased soil discouraged.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

  • Agronomy
Location: Madrid, Spain

Session Introduction

M Angelo Rodrigues

Polytechnic Institute of Bragança, Portugal

Title: Cover cropping in rainfed olive orchards

Time : 11:55-12:20

Speaker
Biography:

M Ângelo Rodrigues has obtained his PhD degree in Edaphic and Environmental Sciences at the University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, Portugal in 2000. He has coordinated and/or participated in two dozen National and International research projects. He has published 130 scientific papers (31 in ISI/JCR journals), book chapters and technical reports. He has been Deputy Director of the School of Agriculture of IPB and President of the scientific committee of the Master’s program of Agroecology at the same institution. He was Vice-Coordinator of the Mountain Research Centre and Vice-Delegate of the Order of Engineers of the district of Bragança, Portugal.

Abstract:

Cover cropping has been advocated as a mean of reducing soil erosion and increasing soil organic matter and functional biodiversity. There are many other good reasons to establish a cover crop in an orchard since it can improve in several ways the physical, chemical and biological properties of a soil. However, herbaceous vegetation competes for resources. In intensive-managed orchards, without limitation of available water and nutrients, probably this is a minor problem. In rainfed orchards, to balance the potential beneficial effects of cover crops and their strong competition for resources in particular for available water is a great challenge. In this work, we report results from field trials from which we are proposing a model of intervention in rainfed managed orchards consisting of the use of very early maturing self-reseeding annual legumes as a cover crop. These plants are able to enrich the soil with nitrogen and to protect the soil all year round through a green cover of vegetation during autumn-spring and a mulch of dead material during summer. Experimental results also showed that nitrogen nutritional status of the olive trees and olive yields increased in comparison to a plot of natural vegetation fertilized with 60 kg N ha-1 yr-1.

  • Soil Management
Location: Madrid, Spain
Biography:

Victor Scartezini Terra has completed his Master’s degree from Federal University of Goias. she is an Adjunct Professor at University of Rio Verde.

Abstract:

Flow problems in unsaturated soil mechanics can be laid in several engineering problems, such as transient analysis of slope stability, volume change in collapsible and expansive soils, earth dam projects, among others. To simulate these problems, plenty of partial differential equations (PDEs) simulating water and air flow through soils can be found on the literature, such as the equations developed by Fredlund and Gitirana Jr (2005) and Ba-Te (2004). This paper aims to develop a formulation based on PDEs governing the coupled flow of water and air phase through unsaturated soils. The equations obtained here are implemented in a PDE solver named FlexPDE, version 6 (PDE Solutions, 2007). To verify the developed FlexPDE model, a benchmark analysis is made by comparing the results from FlexPDE with the results obtained with the package AIR/W from the GeoStudio software (GEO-SLOPE International, 2012). The benchmark analysis consists of a simulation of the axis-translation technique for determination of the matric suction in unsaturated soil. A one-dimensional analysis is made considering a cylindrical soil sample with 2 cm of high. Then the axis-translation technique is simulated by applying a controlled air pressure on the top of the domain. Between the several constitutive relation models that can be found in the literature, the equations of van Genuchten (1980) and Mualem (1976) for the soil-water characteristic curve and for the permeability equations were adopted in this paper. The results show that the FlexPDE model works well in the simulation of the coupled flow of air and water phase through the unsaturated soil. An observation is made related to some problems founded on the AIR/W package in transient analysis with very low timesteps.

  • Edaphology
Location: Madrid, Spain
Speaker
Biography:

Ingrid Rodríguez-Buenfil has her expertise in Biotechnological Process and Design of experiments. She has thirty years of experience in scientific research, with participation in 76 projects (27 as Project Manager), three patents granted and seven patent applications in process. 122 publications among scientific articles, extensive memoirs, book chapters and books among others. Thirty-two graduate students. She was a Founding Director of the Southeast Unit of Center for Research and Assistance in Technology and Design of the State of Jalisco (CIATEJ) in Mérida Yucatán, from July 2002 to April 2015. Her current project is Analysis of the metabolomics changes during the development of the fruit Capsicum chinense jacq. cultivated in different soil types (Project CONACYT 257588). 

Abstract:

Statement of the Problem: The fruits of Capsicum chinense plants grown in the Yucatan Peninsula have its appellation of origin based on their unique characteristics, which are suggested to be due to the particularities of the soils in they are cultivated. Leptosols are the most common soils in the world (12%). This is also the case in Mexico (24%) and in the state of Yucatán (80%) The high spatial heterogeneity of Leptosol areas complicates agricultural development and transfer of agricultural technology, among other things. The aim of this study was to characterize three types of soil from Yucatan México (K’áankab lu’um, Red, Box lu’um, black and stony ch’ich’ lu’um, brown) and to analyze its effect on the growth habanero chili plants.
Methodology: A greenhouse cultivation of 120 plants (40 per land type) was established, after one month were measured: height, number of leaves, number of buttons and flowers. The nutrients determination was performed following the methodology described in Official Mexican Standard NOM-021-SEMARNAT-2000.
 Findings: The black soil was the one with the highest content of phosphorus (P) and carbon (C) and the red the lowest in the initial soil, while in the soil after one month of plant growth, red had the highest phosphorus content with significant differences between them. The height of the plants and the number of buttons was greater in those that were grew in red soil whereas for the number of flowers and leaves there was no significant differences.
Conclusion & Significance: The nutrient content in soils suggests that they are in acceptable concentrations for the development of the plant, however the values of EC and CIC suggest possible problems of availability of these nutrients to the plant. The red soil was the best for the height of the plants and the number of buttons. 
 
Figure 1. Nutrient content in different soil types 

 

  • Soil Pollution
Location: Madrid, Spain
Speaker
Biography:

Tania Pardo is a young researcher and specialized in the remediation of trace element-contaminated soils through phytotechnologies. She obtained her PhD degree in 2013. Her main research activities have been focused on the study of the suitability of different organic composts, pig slurry, digestate, biochar and inorganic (Fe oxides, nano-oxides, lime, red mud derivatives, etc.) amendments, and selection of plants species, for the phytoremediation of trace element-contaminated soils. Particular emphasis has been on the study of the treatments effects on the availability and speciation of trace elements in soil; the uptake and translocation of these elements in plant, and; the soil quality and associated environmental risks. Currently, her research is focused on the optimization of cropping systems of Mediterranean Ni-hyperaccumulating plant species to produce Ni-rich biomass for phytomining purposes, and the combined use of soil amendments and microbial inoculants for the phytoremediation of Cu contaminated mine soils.

Abstract:

The synergistic activity between plants and microorganisms may contribute to the implementation of soil management strategies in natural metal-enriched soils. Inoculation of plants with plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) can induce beneficial effects on plant growth, health and resistance to stress, as well as increasing nutrient availability and changing metal solubility in soil. The present study aimed to assess the potential use of PGPB for improving the establishment and yield of the Ni-hyperaccumulating Mediterranean species Alyssum murale for agromining purposes at field scale. Experimental plots of 4 m2 were established in an ultramafic outcrop of Santiso (NW Spain) and seedlings of previously inoculated two-month-old A. murale were transplanted (4 plants m-2) in three replicate plots. The inoculation treatments included: (i) non-inoculated plants (NI); (ii) Arthrobacter sp. strain LA44; (iii) Arthrobacter sp. strain SBA82; and (iv) Variovorax paradoxus strain AB30 all originally isolated from rhizosphere of Ni hyperaccumulating plant species). After four months, soil pH and extractable-Ni concentrations were not modified by plants, but inoculated plants (especially LA44 and SBA82 strains) increased the soil CEC and water-soluble organic C content. The composition of soil bacterial communities of LA44- and SBA82-soils was like that of untreated soils, but the structure of AB30-soils was different to other soils. LA44 and SBA82 strains increased plant coverage and reduced the levels of some antioxidant enzymes activities compared to NI-plants (CAT and SOD). LA44 strain also enhanced aerial-biomass production of A. murale, obtaining a productivity 5-fold higher than NI-plants. All plants had similar Ni concentrations in their shoots (3.7-4.1 g kg-1), however the phytoextracted Ni per plant and Ni yield was significantly increased by LA44 and SBA82 strains. Therefore, the inoculation of A. murale with LA44 and SBA82 strains improved the agromining success without modifying the structure of soil bacterial communities, and shows the potential of PGPBs in agromining systems.

Figure 1. Aerial biomass production and Ni yield of A. murale after four months of growth at field.