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1.
《Applied soil ecology》2003,22(3):205-210
We examined the response of the temperature coefficient (Q10) for soil respiration rate to changes in environmental temperature through a laboratory incubation experiment. Soil samples were collected from three climatic areas: arctic (Svalbard, Norway), temperate (Tsukuba, Japan) and tropical (Pasoh, Malaysia). The arctic and temperate soils were incubated at 8 °C (control), 12 °C (4 °C warming) and 16 °C (8 °C warming) for 17 days. The tropical soil was incubated at 16 °C (8 °C cooling), 24 °C (control) and 32 °C (8 °C warming). Before and after the incubation experiment, the temperature dependence of soil microbial respiration was measured using an open-airflow method with IRGA by changing the temperature in a water bath. The initial Q10 before the incubation experiment was larger in the soils from higher latitudes: 3.4 in the arctic soil, 2.9 in the temperate soil, and 2.1 in the tropical soil. The response of the microbial respiration rate to change in temperature differed among the three soil types. The temperature dependence of respiration rate in the arctic soil did not change in response to warming by 4 and 8 °C with a Q10 of about 3. On the other hand, the Q10 in the temperate soil decreased with increasing incubation temperature: from 2.8 in soils incubated at 8 °C to 2.5 at 12 °C and 2.0 at 16 °C. In the tropical soil, the Q10 was not changed even by the 8 °C warming with a value of 2.1, whereas the Q10 was increased from 2.1 to 2.7 by the 8 °C cooling. These results suggest that the response of microbial respiration to climatic warming may differ between soils from different latitudes.  相似文献   

2.
Soil-dwelling insect herbivores are significant pests in many managed ecosystems. Because eggs and larvae are difficult to observe, mathematical models have been developed to predict life-cycle events occurring in the soil. To date, these models have incorporated very little empirical information about how soil and drought conditions interact to shape these processes. This study investigated how soil temperature (10, 15, 20 and 25 °C), water content (0.02 (air dried), 0.10 and 0.25 g g?1) and pH (5, 7 and 9) interactively affected egg hatching and early larval lifespan of the clover root weevil (Sitona lepidus Gyllenhal, Coleoptera: Curculionidae). Eggs developed over 3.5 times faster at 25 °C compared with 10 °C (hatching after 40.1 and 11.5 days, respectively). The effect of drought on S. lepidus eggs was investigated by exposing eggs to drought conditions before wetting the soil (2–12 days later) at four temperatures. No eggs hatched in dry soil, suggesting that S. lepidus eggs require water to remain viable. Eggs hatched significantly sooner in slightly acidic soil (pH 5) compared with soils with higher pH values. There was also a significant interaction between soil temperature, pH and soil water content. Egg viability was significantly reduced by exposure to drought. When exposed to 2–6 days of drought, egg viability was 80–100% at all temperatures but fell to 50% after 12 days exposure at 10 °C and did not hatch at all at 20 °C and above. Drought exposure also increased hatching time of viable eggs. The effects of soil conditions on unfed larvae were less influential, except for soil temperature which significantly reduced larval longevity by 57% when reared at 25 °C compared with 10 °C (4.1 and 9.7 days, respectively). The effects of soil conditions on S. lepidus eggs and larvae are discussed in the context of global climate change and how such empirically based information could be useful for refining existing mathematical models of these processes.  相似文献   

3.
《Applied soil ecology》2006,33(3):284-292
We examined the response of the temperature coefficient (Q10) for soil respiration to changes in soil temperature and soil moisture through a laboratory incubation experiment. Two types of soils differing in vegetation and moisture status were collected and incubated under two temperatures (10 and 30 °C) and two soil moisture regimes (35 and 75% of water holding capacity, WHC) for 5 weeks. Before and after the incubation experiment, the temperature coefficient of soil respiration was measured using soda-lime method by changing temperature in a water bath. For both soils, the mean Q10 values of the respiration rate were 2.0 in the 30 °C and 2.3 in the 10 °C soil treatments. Higher temperature with lower soil moisture treatment significantly decreased the Q10 value, whereas lower temperature with higher soil moisture treatment significantly enhanced the Q10 value (ANOVA, p < 0.05). These results indicate that soils became less sensitive to temperature when incubated under higher temperature with higher moisture conditions, and more sensitive in lower temperature with higher moisture conditions.There was a significant correlation (r2 = 0.67, p < 0.05) between water-soluble carbon (WSC) and soil respiration rate. However, the correlation between soil respiration rate and microbial biomass carbon (MBC) was weak (r2 = 0.27, p > 0.05). Although incubation temperature and moisture accounted for 40 and 29% (as r2 × 100%), respectively, of variations in Q10, soil water-soluble carbon content alone could have explained 79% of the variation, indicating that the availability of respiratory substrate, rather than the pool of soil microorganisms, played a crucial role in the response of the temperature coefficient to environmental factors. These results suggest that biotic factors should also be taken into consideration when using the Q10 function to predict the response of soil respiration to global warming.  相似文献   

4.
《Soil & Tillage Research》2007,92(1-2):186-198
The influence of two organic wastes, cotton gin crushed compost (CC) and beet vinasse (BV) applied for 5 years on a Typic Xerofluvent under dryland conditions near to Sevilla city (Guadalquivir River Valley, Andalusia, Spain) on soil erodibility (K factor of the USLE and RUSLE) and soil loss was studied. CC and BV were applied at rates of 1780, 5340, and 10,680 kg ha−1 (expressed as organic matter content). When CC was applied to the soil, erodibility factor (K) is correlated with soil loss, highlighting a decrease in K and soil loss when increased the dose of CC applied to the soil. In this respect, K decreased 17% in CC-amended soils respect to control soil at the end of the experiment, and soil loss decreased 36% in CC-amended soils respect to control soil at the end of the experiment and for 45 min and 60 mm h−1. However, when BV was applied, soil physical and biological properties decreased. K decreased 6.4% in BV-amended soils respect to control soil at the end of the experiment, and soil loss increased 59.7% in BV-amended soils respect to control soil at the end of the experimental period and for 45 min and 60 mm h−1. We think that this is because the higher level of Na+ (and possibly of fulvic acids) in BV increased the exchangeable sodium percentage (ESP) and reduced structural stability of BV-amended soil, leading to higher soil loss. This explains the relatively higher soil loss in BV-amended soils. These results contradict many previous reports in which soil organic matter prevented soil loss. For this reason, the equation of soil erodibility (K factor of USLE and RUSLE) must have in consideration other aspects such as the chemical composition of the soil organic matter as well as the soil structural stability.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Nitrogen (N) from urine excreted by grazing animals can be transformed into N compounds that have detrimental effects on the environment. These include nitrate, which can cause eutrophication of waterways, and nitrous oxide, which is a greenhouse gas. Soil microbes mediate all of these N transformations, but the impact of urine on microbes and how initial soil conditions and urine chemical composition alter their responses to urine are not well understood. This study aimed to determine how soil inorganic N pools, nitrous oxide fluxes, soil microbial activity, biomass, and the community structure of bacteria containing amoA (nitrifiers), nirK, and nirS (denitrifiers) genes responded to the addition of urine over time. Bovine urine containing either a high (15.0 g K+ l?1) or low salt content (10.4 g K+ l?1) was added to soil cores at either low or high moisture content (hereafter termed dry and wet soil respectively; 35% or 70% water-filled pore space after the addition of urine). Changes in soil conditions, inorganic N pools, nitrous oxide fluxes, and the soil microbial community were then measured 1, 3, 8, 15, 29 and 44 days after urine addition. Urine addition increased soil ammonium concentrations by up to 2 mg g d.w.?1, soil pH by up to 2.7 units, and electrical conductivity (EC) by 1.0 and 1.6 dS m?1 in the low and high salt urine treatments respectively. In response, nitrate accumulation and nitrous oxide fluxes were lower in dry compared to wet urine-amended soils and slightly lower in high compared to low salt urine-amended soils. Nitrite concentrations were elevated (>3 μg g d.w.?1) for at least 15 days after urine addition in wet urine-amended soils, but were only this high in the dry urine-amended soils for 1 day after the addition of urine. Microbial biomass was reduced by up to half in the wet urine-amended soils, but was largely unaffected in the dry urine-amended soils. Urine addition affected the community structure of ammonia-oxidising and nitrite-reducing bacteria; this response was also stronger and more persistent in wet than in dry urine-amended soils. Overall, the changes in soil conditions caused by the addition of urine interacted to influence microbial responses, indicating that the effect of urine on soil microbes is likely to be context-dependent.  相似文献   

7.
In a controlled potted experiment, citrus (Poncirus trifoliata) seedlings were inoculated with three species of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, Glomus mosseae, G. versiforme or Gdiaphanum. Two soil-water levels (ample water, −0.10 MPa; drought stress, −0.44 MPa) were applied to the pots 4 months after transplantation. Eighty days after water treatments, the soils and the citrus seedlings were well colonized by the three AM fungi. Mycorrhizal fungus inoculation improved plant biomass regardless of soil-water status but decreased the concentrations of hot water-extractable and hydrolyzable carbohydrates of soils. Mycorrhizal soils exhibited higher Bradford-reactive soil protein concentrations than non-mycorrhizal soils. Mycorrhizas enhanced >2 mm, 1–2 mm and >0.25 mm water-stable aggregate fractions but reduced 0.25–0.5 mm water-stable aggregates. Peroxidase activity was higher in AM than in non-AM soils whether drought stressed or not, whereas catalase activity was lower in AM than non-AM soils. Drought stress and AM fungus inoculation did not affect polyphenol oxidase activity of soils. A positive correlation between the Bradford-reactive soil protein concentrations, soil hyphal length densities, and water-stable aggregates (only >2 mm, 1–2 mm and >0.25 mm) suggests beneficial effects of the AM symbiosis on soil structure. It concluded that AM fungus colonization enhanced plant growth under drought stress indirectly through affecting the soil moisture retention via glomalin's effect on soil water-stable aggregates, although direct mineral nutritional effects could not be excluded.  相似文献   

8.
《Soil & Tillage Research》2007,93(1):171-178
Loamy sand soils of the southeastern USA Coastal Plains often have poor physical properties because they contain cemented subsurface hard layers that restrict root development and yield. Their physical properties can be improved by adding amendments. Polyacrylamide (PAM) amendments and/or organic matter (OM) in the form of ground wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) stubble or pecan (Carya illinoensis) branches were mixed into a blend of 90% E horizon and 10% Ap horizon (to assure microbial presence) obtained from a Norfolk soil (Acrisol or fine-loamy, siliceous, thermic Typic Kandiudult). We hypothesized that incorporation of these amendments would improve soil physical properties by reducing strength and improving aggregation. Amended treatments contained 450 g of soil, OM, and 30 or 120 mg kg−1 of PAM (12 mg mol−1, anionic, and 35% charge density); treatments were incubated for 96 days at 10% (w/w) water content. Twice during the incubation period, treatments were leached with 1.3 pore volumes of deionized water. After leaching and equilibrating to stable water contents, treatments were analyzed for bulk densities and probed with a 5-mm diameter flat-tipped bench-top penetrometer to measure penetration resistances. Though penetration resistances increased for the highest level of PAM amendment, they showed no significance when both PAM and OM were added to the soil. When compared to controls, treatments with PAM at 120 mg kg−1 had decreased bulk densities. Treatments with both rates of PAM had decreased requirements for water needed to maintain treatments at 10% water contents. Aggregation increased with increasing amounts of PAM but showed no consistent trend when both PAM and OM were added to the soil. Because PAM increased aggregation and water holding capacities in these coastal soils, it could reduce the need for deep tillage. However, more work needs to be done to determine an effective mix of PAM and OM.  相似文献   

9.
《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   

10.
Horizontal gene transfer is useful for enhancing bioremediation through gene bioaugmentation. However, factors affecting transfer of degradative plasmids have not been systematically addressed. To this end, plasmid transfer experiments were performed using a TOL-like plasmid carrying the gene encoding for catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (C23O) between two soil bacteria under different conditions. Transfer frequency increased with air temperature in the range of 10–35 °C and reached 6 × 10−4 transconjugants per donor cell at 35 °C. The transfer frequency detected at soil depth 5–10 cm was significantly higher (p < 0.05) compared with other depths. Addition of 5–75% LB in the microbial inoculum promoted plasmid transfer frequencies. Addition of phenol to the experimental system resulted in significantly higher transfer frequency (p < 0.05) compared with no addition. Transfer frequency heat-moisture in loam was significantly higher (p < 0.05) than in other soils. The highest transfer frequency was found in the experiment containing tomato seedlings, with up to about 1.3 × 10−3 transconjugants per donor cell. Corn and wheat seedlings also led to significantly higher transfer frequencies (p < 0.05) compared with no plants. Furthermore, C23O activities of transconjugants formed under different conditions were measured, as a surrogate measure of the activity of transconjugant. Transfer temperature, soil and plant types had a minor influence on activities of transconjugants. Topsoil (0–5 cm) transconjugants expressed C23O more efficiently under normal incubation condition, but less efficiently when soils incubated with excessive LB medium concentrations, and in the absence of phenol in soil. These results suggested that transfer temperature, soil depth, dilutions of LB broth, phenol content, and soil and plant types had important effects on transfer of the TOL-like plasmid in soil, and some factors also affected activities of transconjugants.  相似文献   

11.
A laboratory experiment was performed to assess the impact of ecologically different earthworm species on soil water characteristics, such as soil tension, water content, and water infiltration rate. Three earthworm species (Lumbricus rubellus, Aporrectodea caliginosa, Lumbricus terrestris) were exposed in soil columns (diameter 30 cm, height 50 cm) for 100 days with a total fresh earthworm biomass of 22.7 ± 0.4 g per column, each in duplicate. Each column was equipped with tensiometers at 10 and 40 cm and FD-probes at 10 cm depth, to continuously measure the temporal development of soil tension and soil moisture. Additionally, 30 g of sieved and rewetted horse manure was placed on the soil surface as a food source. Precipitation events (10 mm) were simulated at day 28 and day 64. At the end of the experiment the water infiltration rate and the runoff at 55 cm depth were determined.The results showed considerable evidence, that ecologically different earthworms modify soil water characteristics in different ways. The anecic L. terrestris and the endogeic A. caliginosa showed the tendency to enhance the drying of the topsoil and subsoil. Their intensive and deep burrowing activity might enhance the exchange of water vapor due to a better aeration in soil. In contrast, the epigeic L. rubellus tended to enhance the storage of soil moisture in the topsoil, which might be linked to lower rates of litter loss from soil surface and thus a thicker litter layer remaining. A. caliginosa led to considerable higher water infiltration rates and faster water discharges in the subsoil, relative to the other species, probably due to a high soil dwelling activity.  相似文献   

12.
Paclobutrazol is a plant growth regulator largely utilized in mango cultivation and usually applied directly to soil. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of paclobutrazol on soil microbial biomass, soil respiration and cellulose decomposition in Brazilian soils under laboratory conditions. Soil samples were collected from fields with and without a reported history of paclobutrazol application. A solution of paclobutrazol (8 mg of active ingredient kg?1 of soil) was added to soils, which were then incubated at 28 °C for 30 days. Paclobutrazol decreased soil microbial biomass, soil respiration and cellulose decomposition in soil with and without a report of paclobutrazol application, while significant increase was observed in the respiratory quotient (qCO2). Our results show that the soil microbiological attributes were negatively affected by paclobutrazol in short-term experiment.  相似文献   

13.
《Soil & Tillage Research》2007,92(1-2):22-29
Sustainable agricultural use of cultivated desert soils has become a concern in Hexi Corridor in Gansu Province of China, because loss of topsoil in dust storms has been recently intensified. We chose four desert sites to investigate the effects of cultivation (cropping) on (i) soil organic C and its size fractions and (ii) soil aggregate stability (as a measure of soil erodibility). These parameters are of vital importance for evaluating the sustainability of agricultural practices.Total organic C as well as organic C fractions in soil (coarse organic C, 0.1–2 mm; young organic C, 0.05–0.1 mm; stable organic C, <0.05 mm) generally increased with the duration of the cultivation period from 0 (virgin soil, non-cultivated) to more than 30 years (p < 0.05). Compared to total organic C in virgin soils (2.3–3.5 g kg−1 soil), significantly greater values were found after 10 to >20 years of cultivation (6.2–7.1 g kg−1 soil). The increase in organic C in desert soils following prolonged cultivation was mainly the consequence of an increase in the coarse organic C. The increase in total organic C in soil was also dependent on clay content [total organic C = 0.96 + 0.249 clay content (%) + 0.05 cultivation year, R2 = 0.48, n = 27, p < 0.001]. This indicates that clay protected soil organic C from mineralization, and also contributed to the increase in soil organic C as time of cultivation increased.There was a significant positive correlation between aggregate stability and total organic C across all field sites. The water stability of aggregates was low (with water-stable aggregate percentage ∼4% of dry-sieved aggregates of size 1–5 mm). There was no consistent pattern of increase in the soil aggregate stability with time of cultivation at different locations, suggesting that desert soils might remain prone to wind erosion even after 50 years of cultivation. Alternative management options, such as retaining harvested crop residues on soil surface and excluding or minimizing tillage, may permit sustainable agricultural use of desert soils.  相似文献   

14.
《Applied soil ecology》2005,28(1):15-22
We evaluated the role of soil water content in controlling C and N dynamics within the drilosphere created by the anecic earthworm Lumbricus terrestris (L.). Mesocosms (volume = 3.1 l) were each amended with corn litter and three earthworms. Control treatments received no earthworms and no other earthworm species were present in the soil. WET and DRY treatments received a total of 9.25 cm and 3.25 cm of water, respectively. Water was added on weeks 1, 3, 7, and 10 at a rate of 2.0 cm per mesocosm for WET treatments and 0.5 cm per mesocosm for DRY treatments. Mesocosms were sampled destructively after incubation at 18–20 °C for 0, 3, 7, and 13 weeks. The water content of WET burrow soil ranged from 0.12 g g−1 to 0.18 g g−1 and was significantly higher than in the DRY treatment throughout the incubation period. The live weight of earthworms was significantly higher in the WET treatment only on week 13, whereas litter consumption was significantly lower in the DRY treatment for week 13. Carbon mineralization, measured as CO2 evolved after a 24-h incubation, was consistently higher in WET than in DRY burrow soil. Effects of differences in soil water content were also apparent for biomass C and metabolic quotient. Soil water content did no affect the total C concentration of burrow soil. DRY burrow soil had consistently lower levels of nitrate than WET soil throughout the experiment. Lower levels of ammonium and inorganic N were observed for WET burrow soil on weeks 3 and 7. Water content did not have a significant effect on burrow soil total N. We concluded that the water content of the drilosphere affects both C and N dynamics and can affect the speciation of inorganic N; yet, the effects of soil water content do not appear to result from differences in the feeding activities of anecic earthworms.  相似文献   

15.
Tree species have significant effects on the availability and dynamics of soil organic matter. In the present study, the pool sizes of soil dissolved organic matter (DOM), potential mineralizable N (PMN) and bio-available carbon (C) (measured as cumulative CO2 evolution over 63 days) were compared in soils under three coniferous species — 73 year old slash (Pinus elliottii), hoop (Araucaria cunninghamii) and kauri (Agathis robusta) pines. Results have shown that dissolved organic N (DON) in hot water extracts was 1.5–1.7 times lower in soils under slash pine than under hoop and kauri pines, while soil dissolved organic C (DOC) in hot water extracts tended to be higher under slash pine than hoop and kauri pines but this was not statistically significant. This has led to the higher DOC:DON ratio in soils under slash pine (32) than under hoop and kauri pines (17). Soil DOC and DON in 2 M KCl extracts were not significantly different among the three tree species. The DOC:DON ratio (hot water extracts) was positively and significantly correlated with soil C:N (R2 = 0.886, P < 0.01) and surface litter C:N ratios (R2 = 0.768, P < 0.01), indicating that DOM was mainly derived from litter materials and soil organic matter through dissolution and decomposition. Soil pH was lower under slash pine (4.5) than under hoop (6.0) and kauri (6.2) pines, and negatively correlated with soil total C, C:N ratio, DOC and DOC:DON ratio (hot water extracts), indicating the soil acidity under slash pine favored the accumulation of soil C. Moreover, the amounts of dissolved inorganic N, PMN and bio-available C were also significantly lower in soils under slash pine than under hoop and kauri pines. It is concluded that changes in the quantity and quality of surface litters and soil pH induced by different tree species largely determined the size and quality of soil DOM, and plantations of hoop and kauri pine trees may be better in maintaining long-term soil N fertility than slash pine plantations.  相似文献   

16.
Nitrogen mineralization and nitrification in the soil of sub-alpine ruderal community of Mount Uludağ, Bursa, Turkey was measured for 1 year, under field conditions with Verbascum olympicum and Rumex olympicus being the dominant pioneer species under dry and wet sites, respectively. Seasonal fluctuations were observed in N mineralization and nitrification. The net N mineralization and nitrification were high in early summer and winter, due to high moisture. The annual net N mineralization rate (for the 0–15 cm soil layer) was higher under R. olympicus (188 kg N ha−1 yr−1) than under V. olympicum (96 kg N ha−1 yr−1). A significant positive correlation between net N mineralization and soil organic C (r2 = 0.166), total N (r2 = 0.141) and water content (r2 = 0.211) was found. Our results indicate that N mineralization rate is high in soils of ruderal communities on disturbed sites and varies with dominant species and, a difference in net N mineralization rate can be attributed to organic C, total N and moisture content of soils.  相似文献   

17.
Dicyandiamide (DCD, C2H4N4) is a nitrification inhibitor that has been studied for more than 80 years. However, there are few papers that have examined the use of DCD on dairy farms where cattle graze pasture and where urine is the primary form of nitrogen (N) deposited onto soils. After DCD was applied (10 kg DCD ha?1) with bovine urine (700–1200 kg N ha?1) to five soils throughout New Zealand, the reduction in direct nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions was significant and remarkably consistent (71 ± 8%, average ± standard error). The application of DCD to these soils occurred in autumn and winter; daily average soil temperature (T) was reported but these data were not further analysed. Perusal of the literature suggested no consensus on the temperature dependence of DCD degradation in soils. Based on published data from controlled-environment studies of soils sampled in four countries, we quantified the relation between T and the time for DCD concentration in soils to decline to half its application value (t½) as t½ (T) = 168e?0.084T with parameter standard errors of ±16 d and ±0.011 d?1, respectively (n = 16). For example, at 5 °C a 1 °C increase in T reduced t½ from 110 to 101 d whereas at 25 °C the reduction was 20–19 d. Analysing T data from the New Zealand trials using our t½ (T) function, over 43–89 d when direct N2O emissions from treated plots became indistinguishable from the controls, the estimated percentage of applied DCD remaining in the soil averaged 43 ± 10%. These calculations suggested the apparently remaining DCD was ineffective with respect to direct N2O emissions. In the absence of measurements, explanations for this interpretation included vertical displacement of the DCD and sorption onto organic matter in soils. The consistent DCD efficacy from these trials corresponded with T generally <10 °C, so it is suggested as an application criteria for the reduction of direct N2O emissions from pastoral soils subjected to urine excretion by grazing cattle.  相似文献   

18.
Building soil structure in agroecosystems is important because it governs soil functions such as air and water movement, soil C stabilization, nutrient availability, and root system development. This study examined, under laboratory conditions, effects of organic amendments comprised of differing proportions of labile and semi-labile C on microbial community structure and macroaggregate formation in three variously textured soils where native structure was destroyed. Three amendment treatments were imposed (in order of increasing C lability): vegetable compost, dairy manure, hairy vetch (Vicia villosa Roth). Formation of water stable macroaggregates and changes in microbial community structure were evaluated over 82 days. Regardless of soil type, formation of large macroaggregates (LMA, >2000 μm diameter) was highest in soils amended with vetch, followed by manure, non-amended control, and compost. Vetch and manure had greater microbially available C and caused an increase in fungal biomarkers in all soils. Regression analysis indicated that LMA formation was most strongly related to the relative abundance of the fungal fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) 18:2ω6c (r = 0.55, p < 0.001), fungal ergosterol (r = 0.58, p < 0.001), and microbial biomass (r = 0.57, p < 0.001). Non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMS) ordination of FAME profiles revealed that vetch and manure drove shifts toward fungal-dominated soil microbial communities and greater LMA formation in these soils. This study demonstrated that, due to their greater amounts of microbially available C, vetch or manure inputs can be used to promote fungal proliferation in order to maintain or improve soil structure.  相似文献   

19.
Population size of soil ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) was quantified by real-time PCR in a long-term (16 years) field experiment under different fertilizer managements. AOB population sizes in mineral nitrogen-fertilized soils and organic manure-fertilized soil were 10.3 and 3.1 times, respectively, that of the control, while phosphorus and potassium fertilization had no significant effect. On the other hand, the AOB specific nitrification potential (soil nitrification potential per AOB cell) was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in organic manure-fertilized soil than in mineral-fertilized soils and the control, indicating that AOB was likely more metabolically active in organic manure-fertilized soils than in mineral nitrogen-fertilized soils after long-term application.  相似文献   

20.
《Applied soil ecology》2006,32(3):199-210
Common root rot (causal agent Aphanomyes euteiches) is a major disease of commercially grown snap bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.). Organic amendments hold potential to suppress plant diseases, which may be due to changes in soil biology and other soil properties. The objective of this study was to determine the potential of paper-mill residual by-products to suppress common root rot of snap bean in relation to soil properties. The study was done on soil (Plainfield sandy loam, Hancock, WI) from a field trial comparing annual applications of fresh paper-mill residuals (0, 22 or 33 dry Mg ha−1) or composted paper-mill residuals (0, 38 or 78 dry Mg ha−1). Soil was removed from each treatment that had been in place 3 years in April 2001 (1 year after last amendment) and on September 2001 (4 months after last amendment) and brought to the laboratory. Soils were incubated at field moisture content (25 °C) and periodically bioassayed with bean seedlings (9, 44, 84, 106, 137, 225 or 270 days after removal from the field) for snap bean root rot. Soils were sampled on the same day as the root rot bioassay and assayed for β-glucosidase, arylsulfatase and fluorescein diacetate hydrolysis activities (FDA), microbial biomass-C (MBC) (by chloroform fumigation), water stable aggregation, and total C. There were large differences in snap bean root rot incidence between the field amendment treatments. The unamended field soil had high levels of disease incidence throughout the experiment but disease incidence tended to decrease over time in amended soils. The disease was suppressed by both fresh and composted paper-mill residuals, but the composted residuals at high rates had the lowest disease incidence (<40%) and produced healthiest plants. Root rot severity was strongly negatively correlated with total C (0.001  p) and arylsulfatase activity (0.001  p). β-Glucosidase activity was negatively correlated (0.05  p) with disease severity while soil MBC showed inconsistent negative correlations with disease severity over the incubation sampling periods. Arylsulfatase activity was the best indicator for reflecting disease suppression. The amendments improved soil quality, which was exemplified by improved aggregation.  相似文献   

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