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1.
Abstract

Langbeinite is a soluble potassium‐magnesium sulfate mineral (K2SO42MgSO4) found as an evaporite in many regions of the world. Langbeinite was used as a reclaiming material in a fine textured (clay loam) saline sodic soil (Grabe Series). This amendment can be dissolved and directly into the irrigation water, displacing sodium (Na) quickly with minimal water use. This amendment was superior over gypsum as a reclaiming material for a saline sodic soil in batch, column, and greenhouse studies. Langbeinite required 50% less irrigation water than gypsum to displace and leach exchangeable Na from soils. Langbeinite improved the infiltration rates of saline sodic soils, but not as effectively as gypsum. Significant increases in germination percent dry matter production mass of lima bean (Phaseolus lunatus L.) plants were observed when using langbeinite over the gypsum soil amendment.  相似文献   

2.
The repeated addition of organic materials to the soil greatly affects the physical, chemical and biological characteristics. In the present work, we analyzed changes in soil quality properties of the tilled layer caused by different agronomic managements of maize which supply different amounts of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) through the addition of slurry, farmyard manure or plant residues. The agronomic history of the analyzed soils, which derived from a medium-term (11 yr) field experiment located in NW Italy, represents typical managements of maize for this region. The area is characterized by highly intensive agriculture, with consequent risks to soil degradation that could be limited by the efficient utilization of organic inputs and by recycling within cropping systems, the large amounts of manure that are produced from the many animal breeding farms in this region. We used a combination of both different chemical (soil organic C and total N) and biochemical indicators (potential soil respiration, potentially mineralizable N (PMN) and potential soil microbial biomass (SMB)). We considered the suitability of the selected biochemical indicators to describe the changes in soil characteristics resulting from the past management.The results showed that the application of the different organic materials, in addition to urea-N fertilizer, increased SOM contents and altered the selected soil biochemical properties compared with the unfertilized treatment, especially in the upper 15 cm of the 0?30 cm tilled soil layer. Farmyard manure applications caused the greatest increase in SOM content, PMN and potential SMB, whilst return of maize straw produced the largest increase in potential soil respiration, but had less effect on total soil organic C and SMB. The use of slurry only caused a moderate increase in SOM and showed intermediate changes in biochemical properties. Also, the rate of C accumulation in the soil per unit of C applied was higher for farmyard manure application than for slurry and straw incorporation in the soil. Fertilization with only mineral N did not induce an increase in Corg and Ntot and even reduces soil N mineralization potential.Because of the high variability in the data, potential SMB carbon could be considered as a less successful indicator for differentiating between past agronomic histories and effects on soil quality, whilst microbial activity (measured by potential soil respiration) and PMN, gave a more reliable and useful indication of the amount of easily decomposable organic carbon.  相似文献   

3.
Changes in soil microbial biomass, enzyme activities, microbial community structure and nitrogen (N) dynamics resulting from organic matter amendments were determined in soils with different management histories to gain better understanding of the effects of long- and short-term management practices on soil microbial properties and key soil processes. Two soils that had been under either long-term organic or conventional management and that varied in microbial biomass and enzyme activity levels but had similar fertility levels were amended with organic material (dried lupin residue, Lupinus angustifolius L.) at amounts equivalent to 0, 4 and 8 t dry matter lupin ha?1. Microbial biomass C and N, arginine deaminase activity, fluorescein diacetate hydrolysis, dehydrogenase enzyme activity and gross N mineralisation were measured in intervals over an 81-day period. The community structure of eubacteria and actinomycetes was examined using PCR–DGGE of 16S rDNA fragments. Results suggested that no direct relationships existed between microbial community structure, enzyme activities and N mineralisation. Microbial biomass and activity changed as a result of lupin amendment whereas the microbial community structure was more strongly influenced by farm management history. The addition of 4 t ha?1 of lupin was sufficient to stimulate the microbial community in both soils, resulting in microbial biomass growth and increased enzyme activities and N mineralisation regardless of past management. Amendment with 8 t lupin ha?1 did not result in an increase proportional to the extra amount added; levels of soil microbial properties were only 1.1–1.7 times higher than in the 4 t ha?1 treatment. Microbial community structure differed significantly between the two soils, while no changes were detected in response to lupin amendment at either level during the short-term incubation. Correlation analyses for each treatment separately, however, revealed differences that were inconsistent with results obtained for soil biological properties suggesting that differences might exist in the structure or physiological properties of a microbial component that was not assessed in this study.  相似文献   

4.
Phosphorus deficiency is wide-spread due to the poor solubility of soil P and the rapid formation of poorly available P after P addition. Microbes play a key role in soil P dynamics by P uptake, solubilisation and mineralisation. Therefore a better understanding of the relationship between type of P amendment, microbial activity and changes in soil P pools is important for a better management of soil P. A P deficient soil was amended with two composts (low P or high P), two crop residues (low P or high P), and inorganic P (KH2PO4) at low and high P, and incubated for 56 days. Composts were added at 20 g kg−1 resulting in a total P addition of 4.1 mg kg−1 soil with the low P compost and 33.2 mg kg−1 soil with the high P compost. The same amount of P was added with the other amendments (residues and inorganic P). All amendments increased cumulative respiration, but microbial biomass and the abundance of bacteria and fungi (assessed by phospholipid fatty acid analysis) increased significantly only in soils with organic amendments, with greater increases with residues. The concentration of the inorganic P pools NaHCO3-Pi, NaOH-Pi and HCl-P increased significantly within 5 h after amendment, particularly with high P amendments. Over the following 56 days, labile inorganic P was converted mainly into non-labile inorganic P with inorganic P addition whereas labile and non-labile organic P was formed with organic amendments. It is concluded that organic P sources, particularly those with high P concentration can stimulate the formation of organic P forms in soils which may provide a long-term slow release P source for plants and soil organisms.  相似文献   

5.
《Soil biology & biochemistry》2001,33(7-8):913-919
A reliable and simple technique for estimating soil microbial biomass (SMB) is essential if the role of microbes in many soil processes is to be quantified. Conventional techniques are notoriously time-consuming and unreproducible. A technique was investigated that uses the UV absorbance at 280 nm of 0.5 M K2SO4 extracts of fumigated and unfumigated soils to estimate the concentrations of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus in the SMB. The procedure is based on the fact that compounds released after chloroform fumigation from lysed microbial cells absorb in the near UV region. Using 29 UK permanent grassland soils, with a wide range of organic matter (2.9–8.0%) and clay contents (22–68%), it was demonstrated that the increase in UV absorbance at 280 nm after soil fumigation was strongly correlated with the SMB C (r=0.92), SMB N (r=0.90) and SMB P (r=0.89), as determined by conventional methods. The soils contained a wide range of SMB C (412–3412 μg g−1 dry soil), N (57–346 μg g−1 dry soil) and P (31–239 μg g−1 dry soil) concentrations. It was thus confirmed that the UV absorbance technique described was a rapid, simple, precise and relatively inexpensive method of estimating soil microbial biomass.  相似文献   

6.
《Applied soil ecology》2006,31(1-2):1-10
A laboratory experiment was carried out to prove the hypothesis that the decomposition of a complex organic substrate is reduced by the lower content of fungal biomass in a saline soil in comparison to a non-saline soil under acidic conditions. Three different rates (0.5, 1.0, and 2.0%) of sugarcane filter cake were added to both soils and incubated for 63 days at 30 °C. In the saline control soil without amendment, cumulative CO2 production was 70% greater than in the corresponding non-saline control soil, but the formation of inorganic N did not differ between these two soils. However, nitrification was inhibited in the saline soil. The increase in cumulative CO2 production by adding filter cake was similar in both soils, corresponding to 29% of the filter cake C at all three addition rates. Also, the increases in microbial biomass C and biomass N were linearly related to the amount of filter cake added, but this increase was slightly higher for both properties in the saline soil. In contrast to microbial biomass, the absolute increase in ergosterol content in the saline soil was on average only half of that in the non-saline soil and it also showed strong temporal changes during the incubation: a strong initial increase after adding the filter cake was followed by a rapid decline. The addition of filter cake led to immobilisation of inorganic N in both soils. This immobilisation was not expected, because the total C-to-total N ratio of the filter cake was below 13 and the organic C-to-organic N ratio in the 0.5 M K2SO4 extract of this material was even lower at 9.2. The immobilisation was considerably higher in the saline soil than in the non-saline soil. The N immobilisation capacity of sugarcane filter cake should be considered when this material is applied to arable sites at high rations.  相似文献   

7.
Spatial and temporal patterns of soil respiration rates and controlling factors were investigated in three wet arctic tundra systems. In situ summer season carbon dioxide fluxes were measured across a range of micro-topographic positions in tussock tundra, wet sedge tundra, and low-centre polygonal tundra, at two different latitudes on the Taimyr Peninsular, central Siberia. Measurements were carried out by means of a multi-channel gas exchange system operating in continuous-flow mode.Measured soil respiration rates ranged from 0.1 g CO2-C m?2 d?1 to 3.9 g CO2-C m?2 d?1 and rate differences between neighbouring sites in the micro-topography (microsites) were larger than those observed between different tundra systems. Statistical analysis identified position of the water table and soil temperature at shallow depths to be common controls of soil respiration rates across all microsites, with each of these two factors explaining high proportions of the observed variations.Modelling of the response of soil respiration to soil temperature and water table for individual microsites revealed systematic differences in the response to the controlling factors between wet and drier microsites. Wet microsites – with a water table position close to the soil surface during most of the summer – showed large soil respiration rate changes with fluctuations of the water table compared to drier microsites. Wet microsites also showed consistently higher temperature sensitivity and a steeper increase of temperature sensitivity with decreasing temperatures than drier sites. Overall, Q10 values ranged from 1.2 to 3.4. The concept of substrate availability for determining temperature sensitivity is applied to reconcile these systematic differences. The results highlight that soil respiration rates in wet tundra are foremost controlled by water table and only secondarily by soil temperature. Wet sites have a larger potential for changes in soil respiration rates under changing environmental conditions, compared to drier sites.It is concluded that understanding and forecasting gaseous carbon losses from arctic tundra soils and its implication for ecosystem-scale CO2 fluxes and soil organic matter dynamics require good knowledge about temporal and spatial patterns of soil water conditions. The water status of tundra soils can serve as a control on the temperature sensitivity of soil respiration.  相似文献   

8.
A short-term incubation study was carried out to investigate the effect of biochar addition to soil on CO2 emissions, microbial biomass, soil soluble carbon (C) nitrogen (N) and nitrate–nitrogen (NO3–N). Four soil treatments were investigated: soil only (control); soil + 5% biochar; soil + 0.5% wheat straw; soil + 5% biochar + 0.5% wheat straw. The biochar used was obtained from hardwood by pyrolysis at 500 °C. Periodic measurements of soil respiration, microbial biomass, soluble organic C, N and NO3–N were performed throughout the experiment (84 days). Only 2.8% of the added biochar C was respired, whereas 56% of the added wheat straw C was decomposed. Total net CO2 emitted by soil respiration suggested that wheat straw had no priming effect on biochar C decomposition. Moreover, wheat straw significantly increased microbial C and N and at the same time decreased soluble organic N. On the other hand, biochar did not influence microbial biomass nor soluble organic N. Thus it is possible to conclude that biochar was a very stable C source and could be an efficient, long-term strategy to sequester C in soils. Moreover, the addition of crop residues together with biochar could actively reduce the soil N leaching potential by means of N immobilization.  相似文献   

9.
Earthworms and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are known to independently affect soil microbial and biochemical properties, in particular soil microbial biomass (SMB) and enzymes. However, less information is available about their interactive effects, particularly in soils contaminated with heavy metals such as cadmium (Cd). The amount of soil microbial biomass C (MBC), the rate of soil respiration (SRR) and the activities of urease and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) were measured in a calcareous soil artificially spiked with Cd (10 and 20 mg Cd kg−1), inoculated with earthworm (Lumbricus rubellus L.), and AMF (Glomus intraradices and Glomus mosseae species) under maize (Zea mays L.) crop for 60 days. Results showed that the quantity of MBC, SRR and enzyme activities decreased with increasing Cd levels as a result of the elevated exchangeable Cd concentration. Earthworm addition increased soil exchangeable Cd levels, while AMF and their interaction with earthworms had no influence on this fraction of Cd. Earthworm activity resulted in no change in soil MBC, while inoculation with both AMF species significantly enhanced soil MBC contents. However, the presence of earthworms lowered soil MBC when inoculated with G. mosseae fungi, showing an interaction between the two organisms. Soil enzyme activities and SRR values tended to increase considerably with the inoculation of both earthworms and AMF. Nevertheless, earthworm activity did not affect ALP activity when inoculated with G. mosseae fungi, while the presence of earthworm enhanced urease activity only with G. intraradices species. The increases in enzyme activities and SRR were better ascribed to changes in soil organic carbon (OC), MBC and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) contents. In summary, results demonstrated that the influence of earthworms alone on Cd availability is more important than that of AMF in Cd-polluted soils; and that the interaction effects between these organisms on soil microorganism are much more important than on Cd availability. Thus, the presence of both earthworms and AMF could alleviate Cd effects on soil microbial life.  相似文献   

10.
《Soil biology & biochemistry》2001,33(12-13):1797-1804
Sulphur transformations were monitored in a unique set of arable, grassland and woodland soils from the Broadbalk Classical Experiment, which started in 1843. In an open incubation experiment with periodic leaching, 14–35 mg SO42−-S kg−1 was mineralised in 28 weeks at 25°C, equivalent to 4.4–8.3% soil organic S. Cumulative amounts of S mineralised increased linearly during the 28 weeks, indicating constant rates of mineralisation. The rate of mineralisation was the greatest in the woodland soil (170 μg SO4-S kg−1 day−1), followed by the grassland (120 μg SO4-S kg−1 day−1) and the arable soil from the farmyard manure (FYM) plot (110 μg SO4-S kg−1 day−1). Three soils from arable plots receiving different inorganic fertiliser treatments but no FYM had similar rates of S mineralisation (~70 μg SO4-S kg−1 day−1). In an incubation experiment with 35SO42−, addition of glucose greatly enhanced S immobilisation. In 132 days, the woodland and grassland soils immobilised more S than the arable soils, with or without glucose amendment. Immobilisation and mineralisation of S occurred concurrently, and both were stimulated by glucose addition. The results show that S mineralisation and immobilisation were influenced strongly by the type of land-use and long-term organic manuring, whereas annual application of sulphate-containing fertilisers for over 150 years had few effects on short-term S transformations.  相似文献   

11.
《Applied soil ecology》2009,41(3):529-535
The repeated introduction of an organic resource to soil can result in its enhanced degradation. This phenomenon is of primary importance in agroecosystems, where the dynamics of repeated nutrient, pesticide, and herbicide amendment must be understood to achieve optimal yield. Although not yet investigated, the repeated introduction of cadaveric material is an important area of research in forensic science and cemetery planning. It is not currently understood what effects the repeated burial of cadaveric material has on cadaver decomposition or soil processes such as carbon mineralization. To address this gap in knowledge, we conducted a laboratory experiment using ovine (Ovis aries) skeletal muscle tissue (striated muscle used for locomotion) and three contrasting soils (brown earth, rendzina, podsol) from Great Britain. This experiment comprised two stages. In Stage I skeletal muscle tissue (150 g as 1.5 g cubes) was buried in sieved (4.6 mm) soil (10 kg dry weight) calibrated to 60% water holding capacity and allowed to decompose in the dark for 70 days at 22 °C. Control samples comprised soil without skeletal muscle tissue. In Stage II, soils were weighed (100 g dry weight at 60% WHC) into 1285 ml incubation microcosms. Half of the soils were designated for a second tissue amendment, which comprised the burial (2.5 cm) of 1.5 g cube of skeletal muscle tissue. The remaining half of the samples did not receive tissue. Thus, four treatments were used in each soil, reflecting all possible combinations of tissue burial (+) and control (−). Subsequent measures of tissue mass loss, carbon dioxide-carbon evolution, soil microbial biomass carbon, metabolic quotient and soil pH show that repeated burial of skeletal muscle tissue was associated with a significantly greater rate of decomposition in all soils. However, soil microbial biomass following repeated burial was either not significantly different (brown earth, podsol) or significantly less (rendzina) than new gravesoil. Based on these results, we conclude that enhanced decomposition of skeletal muscle tissue was most likely due to the proliferation of zymogenous soil microbes able to better use cadaveric material re-introduced to the soil.  相似文献   

12.
Addition of organic manure over thousands of years has resulted in the development of very fertile soils in parts of the Loess Plateau in Northwest China. This region also suffers from serious soil erosion. For that reason, afforestation of arable soils has taken place. The dynamics of soil organic matter in these soils affected by a very specific management and by land use changes is largely unknown. Therefore, we measured C mineralization in a 35-days incubation experiment and analyzed amounts and properties of water-extractable organic carbon (WEOC) in 12 topsoils of this region. The soils differed in land use (arable vs. forest) and in amounts of added organic manure. Afforestation of arable soils resulted in a distinct stabilization of organic C as indicated by the smallest C mineralization (0.48 mg C g−1 C d−1) and the highest C content (2.3%) of the studied soils. In the soils exposed to intensive crop production without regular addition of organic manure we found the largest C mineralization (0.85 mg C g−1 C d−1) and the lowest contents of organic C (0.9%). Addition of organic manure over a time scale of millennia resulted in high organic C contents (1.8%) and small C mineralization (0.55 mg C g−1 C d−1). The content of WEOC reflected differences in C mineralization between the soils quite well and the two variables correlated significantly. Water-extractable organic C decreased during C mineralization from the soil illustrating its mainly labile character. Carbon mineralization from soils was particularly large in soils with small specific UV absorbance of WEOC. We conclude that amounts and properties of WEOC reflected differences in the stability of soil organic C. Both afforestation of arable land and the long-term addition of organic manure may contribute to C accumulation and stabilization in these soils.  相似文献   

13.
Saline soils are wide-spread and characterised by poor plant growth and low microbial activity but salinity fluctuates seasonally or with irrigation water quality. Therefore it is important to understand the response of soil microbial communities to changes in soil salinity. We carried out an experiment to test the hypothesis that microbial communities from soils with medium to high salinity respond differently to salinity than microbes from non-saline soils or soils with low salinity. We prepared a microbial inoculum from field soils of different salinity (EC1:5 0.3, 1.1, 2.7, 4.6 and 6.0 dS m−1). This inoculum was added to quartz sand adjusted to EC1:5 0.3, 1.1, 2.9, 4.6, 6.0 and 8.0 dS m−1 and amended with finely ground wheat straw and basal nutrients. The sand mix was incubated at 80% water holding capacity for 27 days. Soil respiration was measured continuously, microbial community composition (based on phospholipid fatty acid analysis) and particulate organic carbon (POC) were determined at the start and the end of the incubation. Irrespective of inoculum EC, cumulative respiration decreased with increasing adjusted EC with no differences among inocula. The POC concentration was always lowest at adjusted EC 0.3 and highest at EC 8.0. Up to adjusted EC 4.6, the POC concentration was lower with inoculum EC 0.3 than with the inocula of higher EC. The inocula had distinct microbial community composition at all adjusted ECs, but the changes induced by the adjusted EC were similar in all inocula. The results are contrast to our hypothesis because increasing salinity decreased soil respiration of all inocula to a similar extent. In fact, the lower POC concentration with inoculum from the non-saline soil up to an adjusted EC of 4.6 suggests that the microbial communities from the non-saline soil are able to decompose the added wheat straw under low to moderate salinity to a greater extent than those from saline soils. On the other hand, even microbes from highly saline soils can respond quickly with an increase in activity if the salinity is reduced, e.g. after heavy rainfall which leaches the salts out of the top soil.  相似文献   

14.
《Applied soil ecology》2002,19(3):237-248
Recycling of organic wastes within agriculture may help maintain soil fertility via effects on physical, chemical and biological properties. Efficient use, however, requires an individual assessment of waste products, and effects should be compared with natural variations due to climate and soil type. An 11-month incubation experiment was conducted between April 1998 and March 1999, in which a sandy loam without or with anerobically digested sewage sludge (4.2 t dry matter (DM) ha−1) or household compost (17 t DM ha−1) was incubated under constant laboratory conditions at 10 °C, as well as in the field. The following properties were monitored: wet-stability of soil aggregates, clay dispersibility, hot-water extractable carbohydrates, resin-extractable Pi, inorganic N, biomass C and N, PLFA profiles, FDA hydrolysis activity, β-glucosidase activity and CO2 evolution. In general, effects of waste amendment were positive, but moderate compared to the dynamics observed in unamended soil, and mainly occurred in the first several weeks after amendment. The temporal dynamics of inorganic N, FDA hydrolysis activity, biomass C and PLFA composition appeared to be faster under the fluctuating climatic conditions in the field. To evaluate accumulated effects of repeated waste applications, soil was also sampled from a field trial, in which the sewage sludge and household compost had been applied at the same rates as in the incubation study for three consecutive years. Sampling took place after the final harvest, i.e. 5 months after the final waste application. Compost amendment had increased potentially mineralizable N by a factor of 1.8, and sludge amendment had increased the amount of resin-extractable Pi by a factor of 1.6. However, there were no accumulated effects of waste amendment on the fraction of soil in wet-stable aggregates, or on the microbiological properties tested, which supported the observation from the incubation study that effects of organic wastes were transient.  相似文献   

15.
We used natural gradients in soil and vegetation δ13C signatures in a savannah ecosystem in Texas to partition soil respiration into the autotrophic (Ra) and heterotrophic (Rh) components. We measured soil respiration along short transects from under clusters of C3 trees into the C4 dominated grassland. The site chosen for the study was experiencing a prolonged drought, so an irrigation treatment was applied at two positions of each transect. Soil surface CO2 efflux was measured along transects and CO2 collected for analysis of the δ13C signature in order to: (i) determine how soil respiration rates varied along transects and were affected by localised change in soil moisture and (ii) partition the soil surface CO2 efflux into Ra and Rh, which required measurement of the δ13C signature of root- and soil-derived CO2 for use in a mass balance model.The soil at the site was unusually dry, with mean volumetric soil water content of 8.2%. Soil respiration rates were fastest in the centre of the tree cluster (1.5 ± 0.18 μmol m?2 s?1; mean ± SE) and slowest at the cluster–grassland transition (0.6 ± 0.12 μmol m?2 s?1). Irrigation produced a 7–11 fold increase in the soil respiration rate. There were no significant differences (p > 0.5) between the δ13C signature of root biomass and respired CO2, but differences (p < 0.01) were observed between the respired CO2 and soil when sampled at the edge of the clusters and in the grassland. Therefore, end member values were measured by root and soil incubations, with times kept constant at 30 min for roots and 2 h for soils. The δ13C signature of the soil surface CO2 efflux and the two end member values were used to calculate that, in the irrigated soils, Rh comprised 51 ± 13.5% of the soil surface CO2 efflux at the mid canopy position and 57 ± 7.4% at the drip line. In non-irrigated soil it was not possible to partition soil respiration, because the δ13C signature of the soil surface CO2 efflux was enriched compared to both the end member values. This was probably due to a combination of the very dry porous soils at our study site (which may have been particularly susceptible to ingress of atmospheric CO2) and the very slow respiration rates of the non-irrigated soils.  相似文献   

16.
Composting and thermal drying are amongst the most commonly used post-digestion processes for allowing sanitation and biological stabilization of sewage sludge from municipal treatment plants, and making it suitable as soil conditioner for use in agriculture. To assess the impact of sludge-derived materials on soil microbial properties, fresh (LAF), composted (LAC) and thermally dried (LAT) sludge fractions, each resulting from a different post-treatment process of a same aerobically digested sewage sludge, were added at 1% (w/w) application rate on two contrasting (a loam and a loamy sand) soils and incubated under laboratory conditions for 28 days. Soil respiration, microbial ATP content, hydrolytic activities and arginine ammonification rate were monitored throughout the incubation period. Results showed that soil biochemical variables, including the metabolic quotient (qCO2), were markedly stimulated after sludge application, and the magnitude of this stimulatory effect was dependent on sludge type (precisely LAT > LAF > LAC), but not on soil type. This effect was related to the content of stable organic matter, which was lower in LAT. Genetic fingerprinting by PCR–DGGE revealed that compositional shifts of soil bacterial and, at greater extent, actinobacterial communities were responsive to the amendment with a differing sludge fraction. The observed time-dependent changes in the DGGE profiles of amended soils reflected the microbial turnover dependent on the sludge nutrient input, whereas no indications of adverse effects of sludge-borne contaminants were noted. Our findings indicate that composting rather thermal drying can represent a more appropriate post-digestion process to make sewage sludge suitable for use as soil conditioner in agriculture.  相似文献   

17.
《Applied soil ecology》2011,48(3):210-216
Labile soil organic matter (SOM) can sensitively respond to changes in land use and management practices, and has been suggested as an early and sensitive indicator of SOM. However, knowledge of effects of forest vegetation type on labile SOM is still scarce, particularly in subtropical regions. Soil microbial biomass C and N, water-soluble soil organic C and N, and light SOM fraction in four subtropical forests were studied in subtropical China. Forest vegetation type significantly affected labile SOM. Secondary broadleaved forest (SBF) had the highest soil microbial biomass, basal respiration and water-soluble SOM, and the pure Cunninghamia lanceolata plantation (PC) the lowest. Soil microbial biomass C and N and respiration were on average 100%, 104% and 75%, respectively higher in the SBF than in the PC. The influence of vegetation on water-soluble SOM was generally larger in the 0–10 cm soil layer than in the 10–20 cm. Cold- and hot-water-soluble organic C and N were on average 33–70% higher in the SBF than in the PC. Cold- and hot-soluble soil organic C concentrations in the coniferous-broadleaved mixed plantations were on average 38.1 and 25.0% higher than in the pure coniferous plantation, and cold- and hot-soluble soil total N were 51.4 and 14.1% higher, respectively. Therefore, introducing native broadleaved trees into pure coniferous plantations increased water-soluble SOM. The light SOM fraction (free and occluded) in the 0–10 cm soil layer, which ranged from 11.7 to 29.2 g kg−1 dry weight of soil, was strongly affected by vegetation. The light fraction soil organic C, expressed as percent of total soil organic C, ranged from 18.3% in the mixed plantations of C. lanceolata and Kalopanax septemlobus to 26.3% in the SBF. In addition, there were strong correlations among soil organic C and labile fractions, suggesting that they were in close association and partly represented similar C pools in soils. Our results indicated that hot-water-soluble method could be a suitable measure for labile SOM in subtropical forest soils.  相似文献   

18.
We studied a semi-natural forest in Northern Italy that was set aside more than 50 years ago, in order to better understand the soil carbon cycle and in particular the partitioning of soil respiration between autotrophic and heterotrophic respiration. Here we report on soil organic carbon, root density, and estimates of annual fluxes of soil CO2 as measured with a mobile chamber system at 16 permanent collars about monthly during the course of a year. We partitioned between autotrophic and heterotrophic respiration by the indirect regression method, which enabled us to obtain the seasonal pattern of single components.The soil pool of organic carbon, with 15.8 (±4.5) kg m?2, was very high over the entire depth of 45 cm. The annual respiration rates ranged from 0.6 to 6.9 μmol CO2 m?2 s?1 with an average value of 3.4 (±2.3) μmol CO2 m?2 s?1, and a cumulative flux of 1.1 kg C m?2 yr?1. The heterotrophic component accounted for 66% of annual CO2 efflux. Soil temperature largely controlled the heterotrophic respiration (R2 = 0.93), while the autotrophic component followed irradiation, pointing to the role of photosynthesis in modulating the annual course of soil respiration.Most studies on soil respiration partitioning indicate autotrophic root respiration as a first control of the spatial variability of the overall respiration, which originates mainly from the uppermost soil layers. Instead, in our forest the spatial variability of soil respiration was mainly linked to soil carbon, and deeper layers seemed to provide a significant contribution to soil respiration, a feature that may be typical for an undisturbed, naturally maturing ecosystem with well developed pedobiological processes and high carbon stocks.  相似文献   

19.
The potential for microorganisms to affect the quantity and quality of organic and condensed forms of phosphorus (P) in soils was investigated by repeated addition of different carbon sources (glucose, starch, cellulose; 2.5 g C kg?1) with or without inorganic P (50 mg P kg?1) to acid and calcareous soils which were either natural soils or clay–sand mixtures free of organic matter. Forms of P after five amendments and subsequent incubation periods of 5 weeks each were analyzed by 31P solution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and the microbial community composition was assessed by selective plate counts and fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analysis. All carbon additions induced a redistribution of P from inorganic to organic and condensed forms, which was only little affected by the addition of inorganic P. Compared to non-carbon-amended controls, the greatest increase (7–38 mg P kg?1) in organic P was observed in the monoester region. In the acid clay–sand mixture, there was a large accumulation of pyrophosphate (101 mg P kg?1) after glucose addition and smaller accumulations (6–25 mg P kg?1) after addition of starch and cellulose. Carbon additions increased the microbial biomass in all cases and except in the natural calcareous soil also the proportion of fungi. Redundancy analysis with Monte Carlo permutation tests revealed that for carbon-amended soils, the microbial community composition was more strongly influenced by soil type than by carbon source. Pyrophosphate was positively related to fungi, and diester P was positively related to soil pH. A large proportion of organic and condensed forms of P may still have been in microbial cells at the time of extraction. We have shown that soil organic P consists of some discrete and simple compounds along with some more complex forms, and that organic P recently synthesized by microbes consists almost exclusively of and thus is a likely source for the simple compounds found in natural soils.  相似文献   

20.
The main aim of this study is to analyze the influence of 4-nonylphenol (NP) on soil water retention and biological activity. Two doses of 4-nonylphenol (25 and 50 mg kg−1) were tested in a loam soil with and without peat amendment. In general, one week after the start of the experiment, the soil water content retained at −0.75 MPa of soil suction was 18% higher in the soil amended and its basal respiration (BR) was 15% higher than soil without peat. In contrast, the microbial activity indices (CM: coefficient of mineralization or BR:total organic carbon (TOC) ratio; Cmic:Corg: microbial biomass carbon (MBC):TOC ratio; qCO2: metabolic quotient or BR:MBC ratio) were higher in the soil without peat, compared to the soil amended with peat. On the other hand, the addition of NP to soil was able to modify soil biological but not physical (water retention, desorption) properties. When soil was amended with peat, MBC was reduced one week after applying NP. In contrast, no effects of NP on MBC were observed in the soil without peat. BR was reduced by 16% one week after applying 50 mg kg−1 of NP to soil with peat, and was increased by 46% one week after applying 25 mg kg−1 of NP to soil without peat. The effects of NP on MBC and BR could be associated more with the adsorption of NP by soil organic matter, while changes in CM or Cmic:Corg ratio were more closely related to changes in soil water retention. The potential toxic effects of NP (high qCO2 values) were only observed in the absence of peat amendments. Peat addition reduced NP toxic effects on microorganisms.  相似文献   

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