Phosphatized volcanic soils of Fernando de Noronha Island, Brazil : paleoclimates and landscape evolution.
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2020
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Volcanic oceanic islands host soils that may hold important paleo-environmental proxies, based on vegetation
and faunal evidences coupled with pedological and geomorphological indicators. In this regard, the main
Brazilian oceanic island of Fernando de Noronha (FNI) still lacks a deeper and more complete analysis of its
climatic history and soil evolution. We select and collect representative FNI soils to interpret their chemical,
physical and mineralogical properties and to explain their changing pedogenesis and geomorphic balance,
aiming at revealing the environmental and landscape evolutionary history of this island. Ten soil pedons on
phonolites, ankaratrites and the associated pyroclastic rocks were collected in June/2018. Six profiles were
classified as Inceptisols, one as Entisol, one as Mollisol, one as Vertisol and another as the first Oxisol ever
described in a Brazilian oceanic island. The pH ranged between 5.0 and 6.0 in the more developed, dystrophic
and Al-saturated soils, whereas alkaline pHs were found in the eutrophic and Na-rich pedons. For the latter
group, chemical and physical attributes are closely associated with the parent material composition, whereas in
the former, present day soil features overprint paleoweathered regoliths and former pedogenetic processes. High
concentrations of available phosphorus (P) were observed in all soils and horizons, even at depths greater than
150 cm, and P forms were detected as amorphous or poorly-crystalline phosphates (Al, Fe, Na, Ca and K). High-
and low-activity clay minerals coexist, combined with gibbsite and unstable primary minerals, indicating the
polygenetic nature of FNI soils. A combined pedogeomorphological analysis indicated the existence of a high
paleoweathered plateau with relict soils, and erosional surfaces hosting younger soils. Results showed the
succession of at least three distinct main paleoclimates since the Pliocene and a post-magmatic model for
landscape evolution. The unreported, widespread and intense phosphatization of all soils and paleosurfaces is
attributed to a past large population of birds nesting all over the island, corroborating old historical records of
the island’s early occupation. Report the occurrence of Brazil’s first ornithogenic Oxisol with more than 500 mg/
kg of bioavailable P.
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Volcanic islands, Soil properties, Phosphatization, Climate change, Ornithogenic soils
Citação
SILVEIRA, J. C. et al. Phosphatized volcanic soils of Fernando de Noronha Island, Brazil: paleoclimates and landscape evolution. Catena, v. 195, artigo 104728, 2020. Disponível em: <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0341816220302782>. Acesso em: 29 abr. 2022.