- Alfisols
Alfisols are a soil order in
USDA soil taxonomy . Alfisols form in semiarid to humid areas, typically under ahardwood forest cover. They have a clay and nutrient-enriched subsoil. "Alf" refers to aluminium (Al) and iron (Fe). Because of their productivity and abundance, the Alfisols represent one of the more important soil orders. They are widely used both in agriculture and forestry and are generally easier to keep fertile than other humid-climate soils, though those inAustralia andAfrica are still very deficient innitrogen and availablephosphorus . Those inmonsoon al tropical regions, however, have a tendency to acidify when heavily cultivated, especially when nitrogenous fertilisers are used.In the
FAO soil classification, most Alfisols are classified as Luvisols or Lixisols, but some are classed as Nitosols.Alfisols occupy around one tenth of the Earth's ice-free land surface. They are dominant in many areas, such the
Ohio River basin in the United States, southern and unglaciatedWestern Europe , the Baltic region and centralEuropean Russia , the drier parts ofPeninsular India , the Soudan in Africa, and many parts ofSouth America .Alfisols represent the youngest forest soil order. Because of this they are less leached, and have a greater than 35% base saturation. They are more weathered than
inceptisols but less weathered thanultisols , unlike which they occur to the north of the limit of maximum glaciation inNorth America .The fossil record of Alfisols begins in the Late
Devonian . Alfisols, probably owing to their fertility, are the oldest forest soils: vegetation on weatheredOxisol s, by contrast, is not known earlier than MiddlePermian . Fossil Alfisols remain common from theCarboniferous and all periods since theEocene .Fact|date=December 2007uborders
:Aqualfs — wet soils; aquic soil moisture regime:Cryalfs — cold climate; frigid or cryic soil temperature regime:Udalfs — humid climate;
udic moisture regime :Ustalfs — subhumid climate; ustic moisture regime:Xeralfs — Mediterranean climate; xeric moisture regimeSee also
*
Pedogenesis
*Pedology (soil study)
*Soil classification
*Soil science
*Soil type External links
*cite web|url=http://soils.usda.gov/technical/classification/orders/alfisols.html|title=Alfisols|publisher=United States Department of Agriculture|accessdate=2008-01-04
*cite web | url =http://soils.ag.uidaho.edu/soilorders/alfisols.htm | title =Alfisols| publisher =University of Idaho
accessdate =2006-05-14
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.