Everything about Ultisols totally explained
Ultisols are an order in
USDA soil taxonomy. They are defined as mineral soils which contain
no calcareous material anywhere within the soil, have less than 10% weatherable minerals in the extreme top layer of soil, and have less the 35%
base saturation throughout the soil.
In the
FAO soil classification system, most Ultisols are known as
Acrisols. Others are classed as
Lixisols or
Nitosols.
The word "Ultisol" is derived from
"ultimate", because Ultisols were seen as the ultimate product of continuous
weathering of minerals in a humid temperate climate without new soil formation via
glaciation.
Typically Ultisols are red to yellow in color and are quite
acidic, often having a
pH of less than 5. The red and yellow colors result from the accumulation of
iron oxide which is highly insoluble in water. Major
nutrients, such as
calcium and
potassium, are typically deficient in Ultisols, which means they generally can't be used for sedentary agriculture without the aid of
lime and other
fertilizers such as
superphosphate. They can be easily exhausted, and require more careful management than
Alfisols or
Mollisols. However, they can be cultivated over a relatively wide range of moisture conditions.
Ultisols can have a variety of clay minerals, but in many cases the dominant mineral is
kaolinite. This clay has good bearing capacity and no shrink-swell property. Consequently, well-drained kaolinitic Ultisols such as the
Cecil series are suitable for urban development.
Ultisols are the dominant soils in the
South of the
United States (where the Cecil series is most famous), southeastern
China,
southeast Asia and some other subtropical and tropical areas. Their northern limit (except
fossil soils) is
very sharply defined in
North America by the limits of maximum
glaciation during the
Pleistocene because Ultisols typically take
hundreds of thousands of years to form - far longer than the length of an
interglacial period today.
The oldest fossil Ultisols are known from the
Carboniferous period when forests first developed. Though known from far north of their present range as recently as the
Miocene, Ultisols are surprisingly rare as fossils overall, since they'd have been expected to be very common in the warm
Mesozoic and
Tertiary paleoclimates.
In USDA soil taxonomy, Ultisols are divided into:
Aquults - Ultisols with a water table at or near the surface for much of the year
Humults - well-drained Ultisols that have high organic matter content
Udults - Ultisols of humid climates
Ustults - Ultisols of semiarid and subhumid climates
Xerults - temperate Ultisols with very dry summers and moist winters
Further Information
Get more info on 'Ultisols'.
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