Soil pH controls nitrification and carbon substrate utilization more than urea or charcoal in some highly acidic soils |
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Authors: | Huaiying Yao Colin D. Campbell Xiaorong Qiao |
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Affiliation: | (1) Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Sub-tropic Soil and Plant Nutrition; Key Laboratory of Environment Remediation and Ecological Health, Ministry of Education, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, 310029, China;(2) Soils Group, Macaulay Land Use Research Institute, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen, AB15 8QH, UK;(3) Department of Soil and Environment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Box 7014, SE-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden |
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Abstract: | Understanding the mechanism and key controlling factors of nitrification in highly acidic soils is important from both ecological
and environmental perspectives. Many acid soils are also characterized by vegetation that produces polyphenolic and terpene
compounds that inhibit microbial activity. We investigated the potentially ameliorative effects of lime, charcoal, and urea
additions on soil nitrification and carbon substrate utilization (using the MicroResp method). Four soils were studied from
widely different environments but with similar pH and inputs of phytochemicals to determine the relative effects of these
potentially controlling factors. The addition of charcoal had no significant effect on net nitrification, but charcoal significantly
increased soil basal respiration and altered C substrate utilization in the two Scottish soils. Urea greatly increased nitrification
in both the Chinese soils, but there was no effect of urea on nitrification in the two Scottish soils. Lime application increased
nitrification in all the soils except for the Chinese mixed forest soil. Multivariate analysis of the C source utilization
data revealed that lime altered C substrate utilization more than urea or charcoal in these highly acidic soils. Our results
suggest that acid-tolerant nitrifiers do exist in these soils and have potential for high activity, and pH (lime addition)
and N-substrate (urea) most often increased nitrification. However, no single factor controlled nitrification in every soil,
suggesting an interaction between abiotic and nitrifier community composition as a result of land use and soil type interactions. |
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