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Hydric soil
View on WikipediaHydric soil is soil which is permanently or seasonally saturated by water, resulting in anaerobic conditions, as found in wetlands.
Overview
[edit]Most soils are aerobic. This is important because plant roots respire (that is, they consume oxygen and carbohydrates while releasing carbon dioxide) and there must be sufficient air—especially oxygen—in the soil to support most forms of soil life. Air normally moves through interconnected pores by forces such as changes in atmospheric pressure, the flushing action of rainwater, and by simple diffusion.
In addition to plant roots, most forms of soil microorganisms need oxygen to survive. This is true of the more well-known soil animals as well, such as ants, earthworms and moles. But soils can often become saturated with water due to rainfall and flooding. Gas diffusion in soil slows (some 10,000 times slower) when soil becomes saturated with water because there are no open passageways for air to travel. When oxygen levels become limited, intense competition arises between soil life forms for the remaining oxygen. When this anaerobic environment continues for long periods during the growing season, quite different biological and chemical reactions begin to dominate, compared with aerobic soils. In soils where saturation with water is prolonged and is repeated for many years, unique soil properties usually develop that can be recognized in the field. Soils with these unique properties are called hydric soils, and although they may occupy a relatively small portion of the landscape, they maintain important soil functions in the environment.[1]
The plants found in hydric soils often have aerenchyma, internal spaces in stems and rhizomes, that allow atmospheric oxygen to be transported to the rooting zone.[2] Hence, many wetlands are dominated by plants with aerenchyma;[3] common examples include cattails, sedges and water-lilies.
Technical definitions
[edit]United States
[edit]A hydric soil is defined by federal law[4] to mean "soil that, in its undrained condition, is saturated, flooded, or ponded long enough during a growing season to develop an anaerobic condition that supports the growth and regeneration of hydrophytic vegetation". This term is part of the legal definition of a wetland included in the United States Food Security Act of 1985 (P.L. 99-198). This definition is provided in the controlling regulations to the Wetland Conservation Provisions of the FSA of 1985(7 C.F.R 12) and is used by the U.S.D.A. Natural Resources Conservation Service in the administration of the Wetland Conservation Compliance provisions ("Swampbuster") contained in the FSA of 1985. In adopting this definition in 1985, Congress attempted to capture the duration of waterlogged condition of a hydric soil by adding that a hydric soil is waterlogged long enough to support not only the growth of plants adapted to life in anaerobic conditions but also the regeneration of such plants.
Another common definition of a hydric soils is provided by the National Technical Committee of Hydric Soils (NTCHS) as "a soil that formed under conditions of saturation, flooding, or ponding long enough during the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part."[5] The NTCHS hydric soil definition is used by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Environmental Protection Agency in their joint responsibilities in the administration of Section 404 of the Clean Water Act (1972).
See also
[edit]- Acid sulfate soil – Soils formed under waterlogged conditions
- Blue goo – Type of soil
- Gley soil – Saturated soil type
- Mesic habitat – Habitat with moderate moisture
- Wade Hurt – American soil scientist (died 2021)
- Xeric – Biome with 250 mm of annual rainfall or less
References
[edit]- ^ Schuyt, K. and Brander, L. 2004. Living Waters: Conserving the Source of Life – The Economic Values of theWorld'sWetlands. Amsterdam, the Netherlands: European Union, and Gland, Switzerland: World Wildlife Fund.
- ^ Justin, S. H. F. W. and Armstrong, W. 1987. The anatomical characteristics of roots and plant response to soil flooding. New Phytologist 106: 465–95.
- ^ Keddy, P.A. 2010. Wetland Ecology: Principles and Conservation (2nd edition). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.
- ^ Food Security Act(FSA) of 1985 16 U.S.C. Section 3801(a)(2)
- ^ This definition (Federal Register, July 13, 1994) replaced the older 1991 version and accomplished two things. First, a soil that is artificially drained or protected (ditches, levees, etc.) is a hydric soil if the soil in its undisturbed state meets the definition of a hydric soil. Estimated soil properties for manipulated soils are based on best professional estimates of the properties thought to exist before manipulation. Second, the link between the definition and criteria was removed.
Bibliography
[edit]- Environmental Laboratory. 1987. Corps of Engineers Wetland Delineation Manual, Technical Report Y-87-1, U.S. Army Engineer Waterways Experiment Station, Vicksburg, Miss. Url (pdf) last accessed 2006-04-16
- Soil Conservation Service. 1994. National Food Security Act Manual. Title 180. USDA Soil Conservation Service, Washington, D.C.
- Soil Survey Staff. 1999. Soil Taxonomy: A Basic System of Soil Classification for Making and Interpreting Soil Surveys. USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, Agric. Hdbk. 436, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 869 pp.
- Soil Survey Staff. 1994. National Soil Survey Handbook. USDA Soil Conservation Service, Washington, D.C.
External links
[edit]- Hydric Soils Technical Note 1: Proper use of Hydric Soil Terminology. USDA-NRCS. Accessed 2006-04-16.
Hydric soil
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Characteristics
Core Definition
Hydric soil is defined as a soil that formed under conditions of saturation, flooding, or ponding long enough during the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part, thereby imparting properties that distinguish it from non-hydric soils.[1][7] These properties, detectable through field observation of morphology or laboratory analysis, stem directly from prolonged wetness and include indicators such as reduced iron concentrations, gleyed matrices, and redoximorphic features like mottles or depletions.[5] The anaerobic environment arises because saturation excludes oxygen from soil pores, shifting microbial activity toward reduction processes that alter soil chemistry, particularly iron and manganese oxidation states.[8] This definition, established by the National Technical Committee for Hydric Soils (NTCHS) under the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), emphasizes formation under undrained conditions sufficient to support hydrophytic vegetation in wetlands, though hydric status focuses solely on soil properties rather than vegetation or hydrology.[9] Anaerobic conditions typically persist when water tables remain at or near the surface for cumulative periods exceeding 7-14 days during the frost-free growing season, depending on temperature and soil type, leading to suppressed aerobic decomposition and accumulation of organic matter.[2] Unlike drained or upland soils, hydric soils exhibit low redox potentials (below +300 mV), fostering sulfate reduction and potential hydrogen sulfide production in extreme cases.[10] The criteria exclude soils with artificial drainage that eliminate anaerobic conditions, ensuring classification reflects natural pedogenic processes rather than human alteration.[11] Field identification relies on observable traits formed by these processes, such as sulfidic materials in coastal marshes or depleted matrices in mineral soils, validated against regional lists maintained by NRCS since the 1980s.[12] This framework supports wetland delineation under the Clean Water Act, where hydric soils serve as a proxy for ecological functions like water retention and carbon sequestration, though not all hydric soils currently exhibit wetness due to prior drainage.[4]Formation Mechanisms
Hydric soils develop primarily through extended periods of saturation, flooding, or ponding during the growing season, which limit oxygen availability in the soil profile and foster anaerobic conditions in the upper horizons.[13][14] This hydrological influence interacts with soil parent material, topography, and permeability to impede drainage and oxygen diffusion, as water-filled pores conduct oxygen approximately 10,000 times more slowly than air-filled ones.[15] Under these reducing environments, aerobic microbial respiration rapidly consumes dissolved oxygen, exceeding replenishment rates and shifting to anaerobic processes dominated by facultative and obligate anaerobes.[16] These microbes facilitate the reduction of ferric iron (Fe³⁺) to ferrous iron (Fe²⁺) and manganese oxides to soluble Mn²⁺, enabling translocation of these elements and resulting in diagnostic features like gleyed matrices (grayish colors from Fe²⁺ dominance), redox depletions (lighter zones cleared of pigments), and concentrations (oxidized mottles or nodules upon episodic drainage).[5][17] Organic matter accumulates due to inhibited aerobic decomposition, with anaerobic breakdown producing methane and other gases rather than fully mineralizing carbon, often forming thick histosols or organic-rich epipedons in poorly drained settings.[16][10] In sulfate-rich environments, sulfate-reducing bacteria further convert SO₄²⁻ to H₂S, yielding sulfidic materials or rotten-egg odors indicative of extreme anaerobiosis.[5] These mechanisms vary by soil texture—finer clays retain water longer, enhancing gleying, while sands may show sulfidic indicators more prominently—and by regional hydrology, but all stem from sustained water excess overriding oxidative processes.[5][18] Parent material low in permeability, such as glacial till or alluvium in low-lying landscapes, amplifies saturation duration, while episodic aeration can produce iron oxide accumulations as secondary features.[19]Historical Context
Legislative Origins
The legislative framework incorporating hydric soils originated from efforts to standardize wetland identification for agricultural conservation, culminating in the Food Security Act of 1985 (Public Law 99-198). This act established the "Swampbuster" provisions under Title XII, which prohibited farmers from receiving certain USDA benefits, such as crop insurance subsidies and disaster payments, if they converted wetlands to cropland after December 23, 1985, through actions like drainage, dredging, or filling. The act defined wetlands using a three-parameter approach—predominance of hydric soils, hydrophytic vegetation, and wetland hydrology—to target areas with saturation long enough during the growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper horizon.[20] This marked the first federal statutory integration of hydric soils as a core criterion for wetland protection, driven by concerns over the loss of approximately 87% of original U.S. wetlands by the mid-1980s due to agricultural expansion.[21] Preceding the act, the concept of hydric soils was developed collaboratively by the Soil Conservation Service (now Natural Resources Conservation Service) and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service starting in 1976, to correlate soil types with the National Wetlands Inventory and support wetland classification under the Clean Water Act of 1972.[21] The term "hydric soil" was formally coined in the 1979 Fish and Wildlife Service publication Classification of Wetlands and Deepwater Habitats of the United States, which described soils formed under saturated conditions supporting hydrophytic vegetation. By 1981, the National Technical Committee for Hydric Soils was formed to refine criteria, leading to the initial list of hydric soils published in 1985, aligning directly with Swampbuster's implementation.[2] Swampbuster's hydric soil requirement was codified in USDA regulations (7 CFR Part 12), referencing the 1985 Hydric Soils of the United States as the basis for identification, emphasizing soils in undrained conditions saturated for at least two weeks during the growing season.[20] This legislative origin complemented Section 404 of the Clean Water Act, administered by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, by extending wetland protections to farmed wetlands previously exempt from dredging and filling permits, thereby reducing annual wetland conversion rates from over 200,000 acres in the early 1980s.[22] Subsequent farm bills, such as the 1990 Food, Agriculture, Conservation, and Trade Act, strengthened enforcement but retained the 1985 foundational definition.Evolution of Technical Standards
The technical standards for identifying hydric soils originated in the late 1970s amid efforts to map wetlands for the National Wetlands Inventory, with the term "hydric soil" first coined in the 1979 publication Classification of Wetlands and Deepwater Habitats by Cowardin et al., which linked soil properties to hydrophytic vegetation.[23] In 1981, the Soil Conservation Service (now NRCS) and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service established the National Technical Committee for Hydric Soils (NTCHS) to define criteria, compile lists, and provide technical guidance for hydric soil identification.[21][23] By 1982, a national bulletin released an initial draft list based on aquic moisture regimes, though it faced criticism for over-reliance on taxonomic criteria rather than direct field evidence of saturation.[21] In 1985, the NTCHS refined the hydric soil definition to emphasize soils saturated long enough during the growing season to produce anaerobic conditions favoring hydrophytic vegetation, shifting focus toward observable redox processes.[21] This was formalized in the 1987 second edition of Hydric Soils of the United States, which incorporated saturation duration requirements and aligned with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Wetlands Delineation Manual, introducing initial field indicators like gleyed matrices and redox concentrations.[21][23] The Federal Register codified the definition on July 13, 1994, specifying soils formed under saturation, flooding, or ponding sufficient to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part during the growing season. Field-based standards advanced with the 1995 release of Field Indicators of Hydric Soils in the United States by the USDA NRCS, providing morphological criteria (e.g., depleted matrices, redox dark surfaces) organized by soil texture for on-site verification, addressing limitations of list-based approaches.[21][24] The NTCHS has since updated these indicators annually, with versions incorporating regional variations, test indicators for problematic soils (e.g., F19 for Piedmont floodplains added in 2006), and refined thresholds for features like redoximorphic accumulations; Version 9.0, released in 2024, includes new region-specific indicators and updated thickness requirements.[5][23][25] To enable quantitative assessment beyond indicators, the NTCHS developed the Hydric Soil Technical Standard (HSTS) in 2007, requiring at least 14 consecutive days of saturation and anaerobic conditions at specified depths for monitoring hydric status, with applications expanded in subsequent research for verifying borderline cases.[23][3] These standards continue to evolve through NTCHS collaboration with agencies like the Corps of Engineers, prioritizing empirical field data over taxonomic proxies to improve delineation accuracy amid regulatory demands.[7]Identification and Indicators
Primary Field Indicators
Primary field indicators for hydric soils are observable morphological features in the soil profile that signal prolonged saturation and anaerobic conditions during the growing season, as defined in U.S. wetland delineation protocols. These indicators are prioritized in field assessments because they provide direct evidence of hydric conditions without requiring laboratory analysis, focusing on properties like color, texture, and organic content that result from reduction-oxidation processes. The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers maintain a standardized list of such indicators, updated periodically based on field validations, with the 2018 version including 25 indicators grouped into categories like histic epipedons, sulfidic materials, and gleyed matrices. Key primary indicators include those most commonly encountered and reliable across diverse soil types:- Histic epipedon (Indicator A1): A layer at or near the surface with 20% or more organic matter, saturated for at least 30 cumulative days during the growing season, appearing as thick, dark, organic-rich muck or peat that resists penetration when wet. This indicator is definitive for organic soils formed under persistent flooding.
- Sulfidic material (Indicator A5): Soil material emitting hydrogen sulfide odor upon exposure to air or containing visible pyrite crystals, indicating sulfate reduction in saturated, low-oxygen environments; pH typically rises above 4.5 when tested with dilute peroxide. This is prevalent in coastal or mineral-rich wetlands.
- Gleyed matrix or depleted matrix (Indicators F1, F2, F3): A layer with 70% or more of the matrix in low-chroma colors (e.g., chroma of 2 or less in hues 10Y, 5GY, etc., per Munsell notation) due to iron reduction, or sand grains stripped of coatings showing similar low chroma. These reflect prolonged anoxia, with gleying extending to 70% of the soil volume in the layer.
- Redox concentrations or depletions (Indicators F6, S5, S6): Prominent iron or manganese oxide accumulations (e.g., masses, nodules) or depletions (pale areas) comprising 2% or more of a layer, often with high chroma (4 or more) in the matrix, signaling fluctuating water tables that mobilize and redeposit minerals.
Specialized Indicators by Soil Texture
Specialized indicators for hydric soils account for variations in water retention and redoximorphic feature development across soil textures, as coarser sands drain more freely than finer loams and clays, influencing the morphology of saturation evidence. The USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) delineates these in its Field Indicators of Hydric Soils in the United States (version 9.0, 2024), grouping indicators into "All Soils" (A series, applicable universally), "Sandy Soils" (S series, for USDA textures of loamy fine sand or coarser), and "Loamy and Clayey Soils" (F series, for loamy very fine sand or finer).[5] Sandy indicators emphasize organic enrichment or stark redox contrasts due to rapid percolation, while loamy/clayey ones highlight matrix gleying or depletions from prolonged anaerobiosis.[5] These categories ensure accurate field identification, with all mineral layers above a qualifying indicator (except certain overrides) required to match the texture group.[5] For sandy soils, key S indicators detect saturation in low-clay environments where iron reduction manifests as streaks or accumulations rather than uniform matrices. S1 (Sandy Mucky Mineral) requires a ≥5 cm thick mucky modified sandy layer (5-12% organic carbon if 0% clay, or 12-18% if ≥60% clay) starting ≤15 cm from the surface, indicating organic buildup from decay under saturation.[5] S5 (Sandy Redox) identifies a ≥10 cm layer starting ≤15 cm deep, with ≥60% matrix chroma ≤2 and ≥2% distinct or prominent redox concentrations (e.g., masses or pore linings), reflecting iron mobilization and reprecipitation.[5] S7 (Dark Surface) applies to a ≥10 cm layer ≤15 cm deep with value ≤3, chroma ≤1, and ≥70% masked sand grains, common in regions with organic staining.[5] These are regionally restricted (e.g., S5 excludes certain arid Land Resource Regions like Q, V), prioritizing empirical field observations over generalized application.[5] In loamy and clayey soils, F indicators capture slower drainage leading to broader gleyed or depleted zones. F1 (Loamy Mucky Mineral) denotes a ≥10 cm mucky modified loamy/clayey layer ≤15 cm from the surface, with organic contents analogous to S1 but suited to higher clay fractions.[5] F3 (Depleted Matrix) requires a depleted matrix (≥60% chroma ≤2, value ≥4 dry or ≥3 moist) ≥5 cm thick if ≤10 cm deep or ≥15 cm if ≤25 cm deep, signaling iron removal under sustained reduction.[5] F6 (Redox Dark Surface) features a ≥10 cm layer ≤20 cm deep with value ≤3, chroma ≤1 (or ≤2 with ≥2% redox concentrations), overlying redox features, applicable except in specific dry regions.[5] Texture-specific thresholds prevent misidentification, as sandy redox patterns would not qualify F indicators, ensuring causal linkage to anaerobic conditions.[5]| Texture Group | Indicator Code | Key Morphological Features | Typical Depth Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sandy Soils | S1 | Mucky modified sandy layer (5-18% organic carbon by clay content) | ≥5 cm thick, ≤15 cm from surface |
| Sandy Soils | S5 | ≥60% low-chroma matrix + ≥2% redox concentrations (masses/pores) | ≥10 cm thick, ≤15 cm from surface |
| Loamy/Clayey | F3 | Depleted matrix (≥60% chroma ≤2, high value) | ≥5-15 cm thick, ≤10-25 cm from surface |
| Loamy/Clayey | F6 | Dark low-chroma surface + underlying redox | ≥10 cm thick, ≤20 cm from surface |
