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      Carbon storage and DNA absorption in allophanic soils and paleosols

      Huang, Yu-Tuan; Lowe, David J.; Churchman, G. Jock; Schipper, Louis A.; Rawlence, Nicolas J.; Cooper, Alan
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      Huang et al. 2014.pdf
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      DOI
       10.1007/978-3-319-04084-4_17
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      Huang, Y.-T., Lowe, D. J., Churchman, G. J., Schipper, L. A., Rawlence, N. J., & Cooper, A. (2014). Carbon storage and DNA absorption in allophanic soils and paleosols. In A. E. Hartemink & K. McSweeney (Eds.), Progress in Soil Science Series (pp. 163–172). New York, USA: Springer, New York. http://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-04084-4_17
      Permanent Research Commons link: https://hdl.handle.net/10289/9045
      Abstract
      Andisols and andic paleosols dominated by the nanocrystalline mineral allophane sequester large amounts of carbon (C), attributable mainly to its chemical bonding with charged hydroxyl groups on the surface of allophane together with its physical protection in nanopores within and between allophane nanoaggregates. C near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) spectra for a New Zealand Andisol (Tirau series) showed that the organic matter (OM) mainly comprises quinonic, aromatic, aliphatic, and carboxylic C. In different buried horizons from several other Andisols, C contents varied but the C species were similar, attributable to pedogenic processes operating during developmental upbuilding, downward leaching, or both. The presence of OM in natural allophanic soils weakened the adsorption of DNA on clay; an adsorption isotherm experiment involving humic acid (HA) showed that HA-free synthetic allophane adsorbed seven times more DNA than HA-rich synthetic allophane. Phosphorus X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectra for salmonsperm DNA and DNA-clay complexes indicated that DNA was bound to the allophane clay through the phosphate group, but it is not clear if DNA was chemically bound to the surface of the allophane or to OM, or both. We plan more experiments to investigate interactions among DNA, allophane (natural and synthetic), and OM. Because DNA shows a high affinity to allophane, we are studying the potential to reconstruct late Quaternary palaeoenvironments by attempting to extract and characterise ancient DNA from allophanic paleosols
      Date
      2014
      Type
      Chapter in Book
      Publisher
      Springer, New York
      Collections
      • Science and Engineering Papers [3124]
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