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1.
Two sandstone-derived soils under pure stands of silver fir (Abies alba Mill.) and European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) were studied to determine if the fine earth (<2 mm material) and two size-classes of porous rock fragments (>2 mm material) supported different microbial communities. Samples from three soil horizons (A, Bw, and BC) were analysed under both optical and scanning electron microscopes. Small stones (2-10 mm in average diameter) appeared more altered than larger ones (40-60 mm) and the effects of weathering became more obvious with shallower depth. In both soils, numerous hyphae and other living forms were observed on the surface of the stones from the A and Bw horizons; this contrasted with the stones from the BC horizon, which showed little or no colonisation. The microbial community of each fraction was characterised using Biolog-Community Level Physiological Profiles (CLPP) and phospholipid fatty acid analyses (PLFA) for samples in the A and B horizons. Significant potential microbial activity (C source utilisation) was associated with rock fragments, from the A horizon and, to a lesser extent, the B, although this was lower than for the equivalent fine earth fraction. The microbial colonisation of the stones appeared inversely related with their size and sampling depth. The PLFA analysis showed not only quantitative differences in the microbial biomass between horizons and size-fractions but also highlighted that the communities differed between soils, horizons (for the sole beech soil) and fractions. These findings demonstrate that by considering rock fragments as a microbiologically inert fraction and discarding them before analysis, as usually is done, can lead to an incomplete picture of both the total amount and, perhaps more importantly, the structure of soil microbial community.  相似文献   

2.
The relationships between arylsulfatase and microbial activity were investigated in regional and microenvironmental scales, at three study sites in Israel, that represent different climatic regions—Mediterranean (sub-humid), mildly arid and arid.Total arylsulfatase activity was divided into extracellular and intracellular (microbial biomass enzyme) activities according to the chloroform-fumigation method. The results show that with increasing aridity, Corg (soil organic carbon), Cmic (soil microbial biomass carbon), Nmic (soil microbial biomass nitrogen) and respiration rate decreased, while Cmic/Corg and metabolic quotient (qCO2) increased. Total, extracellular and microbial biomass arylsulfatase activities decreased with aridity. Expressed as percentage of total activity, the arylsulfatase activity of microbial biomass in the soil, at 0-2 cm and 5-10 cm depths, accounted for more than 50% of the total, in most measurements. This activity was significantly higher in the arid sites than that found in the Mediterranean one for the 0-2 cm soil. The results indicate the importance of the microflora as an enzyme source in soils, especially in arid climate conditions.Enzyme activity in the different study sites was found to be influenced by microenvironmental conditions. The Mediterranean site showed a much higher enzyme activity under shrubs than that under rock fragments and in bare soil. In the arid site rock fragments created a favorable microenvironment for microbial activity on soil surface, which resulted in a much higher microbial biomass and arylsulfatase activity than that in bare soil.The total, extracellular and intracellular arylsulfatase activities, were significantly correlated with Corg, Cmic, Nmic and respiration rate (p<0.05) at all study sites. The correlation coefficients between microbial biomass and arylsulfatase activity were usually higher than those between organic carbon and enzyme activity, especially in the arid sites. Close relationships between microbial biomass and arylsulfatase activities in all the studied sites supported the hypothesis that Corg content and enzyme activities should be related to each other via microbial biomass. Arylsulfatase activity was found to be a good indicator of microbial one. The regression equations between these factors can be incorporated into models of biogeochemical cycling for their easy method of analysis.  相似文献   

3.
Rock fragments in soil can contain significant amounts of organic carbon. We investigated the nature and dynamics of organic matter in rock fragments in the upper horizons of a forest soil derived from sandstone and compared them with the fine earth fraction (<2 mm). The organic C content and its distribution among humic, humin and non‐humic fractions, as well as the isotopic signatures (Δ14C and δ13C) of organic carbon and of CO2 produced during incubation of samples, all show that altered rock fragments contain a dynamic component of the carbon cycle. Rock fragments, especially the highly altered ones, contributed 4.5% to the total organic C content in the soil. The bulk organic matter in both fine earth and highly altered rock fragments in the A1 horizon contained significant amounts of recent C (bomb 14C), indicating that most of this C is cycled quickly in both fractions. In the A horizons, the mean residence times of humic substances from highly altered rock fragments were shorter than those of the humic substances isolated in the fine earth. Values of Δ14C of the CO2 produced during basal respiration confirmed the heterogeneity, complexity and dynamic nature of the organic matter of these rock fragments. The weak 14C signatures of humic substances from the slightly altered rock fragments confirmed the importance of weathering in establishing and improving the interactions between rock fragments and surrounding soil. The progressive enrichment in 13C from components with high‐14C (more recent) to low‐14C (older) indicated that biological activity occurred in both the fine and the coarse fractions. Hence the microflora utilizes energy sources contained in all the soil compartments, and rock fragments are chemically and biologically active in soil, where they form a continuum with the fine earth.  相似文献   

4.
This study aims to elucidate the significance of compost and soil characteristics for the biological activity of compost‐amended soils. Two agricultural soils (Ap horizon, loamy arable Orthic Luvisol and Ah horizon, sandy meadow Dystric Cambisol) and a humus‐free sandy mineral substrate were amended with two biowaste composts of different maturity in a controlled microcosm system for 18 months at 5 °C and 14 °C, respectively. Compost application increased the organic matter mineralization, the Cmic : Corg ratio, and the metabolic quotients significantly in all treatments. The total amount of Corg mineralized ranged from < 1 % (control plots) to 20 % (compost amended Dystric Cambisol). Incubation at 14 °C resulted in 2.7‐ to 4‐fold higher cumulative Corg mineralization compared to 5 °C. The Cmic : Corg ratios of the compost‐amended plots declined rapidly during the first 6 months and reached a similar range as the control plots at the end of the experiment. This effect may identify the compost‐derived microbial biomass as an easily degradable C source. Decreasing mineralization rates and metabolic quotients indicated a shift from a compost‐derived to a soil‐adapted microbial community. The Corg mineralization of the compost amended soils was mainly regulated by the compost maturity and the soil texture (higher activity in the sandy textured soils). The pattern of biological activity in the compost‐amended mineral substrate did not differ markedly from that of the compost‐amended agricultural soils, showing that the turnover of compost‐derived organic matter dominated the overall decay process in each soil. However, a priming effect occurring for the Dystric Cambisol indicated, that the effect of compost application may be soil specific.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract

The study was conducted to evaluate the effect of tea cultivation on soil microbial biomass and community structure. Soil pH, extractable aluminum (Al), organic carbon (Corg) and total nitrogen were considerably modified by tea cultivation. Long‐term tea cultivation resulted in the increase of microbial biomass C (Cmic), microbial biomass N (Nmic), and basal respiration. The metabolic quotient declined as the tea cultivation age increased. The adjacent citrus orchard soil showed a higher Cmic/Corg ratio than the tea orchard soils. Microtitration plates with 21 carbon sources and two different pH levels (4.7 and 7.0) were used to determine the substrate utilization pattern of these soils. The average well color development (AWCD) of the carbon sources in the plates did not vary in a consistent manner with the microbial biomass. Multivariate analysis of sole carbon source utilization pattern demonstrated that land‐use history had a significant effect on substrate utilization pattern. The pH 4.7 characterization medium can increase the discrimination of this technique and is more adequate than the conventional neutral medium for the tea orchard soils.  相似文献   

6.
Soil samples from the upper 10-cm-thick layer of the humus horizon (without forest litter) were taken in Podol’sk and Serpukhov districts (1130 and 1080 km2, respectively) of Moscow oblast. At each sampling site, ecosystem (forest, plowland, or fallow), soil (soddy-podzolic, soddy-gley, bog-podzolic, meadow alluvial, gray forest, and anthropogenically transformed soils of lawns and industrial zones), predominant vegetation, and topography (floodplain and low, medium, and upper parts of watersheds) were determined. The carbon content of the microbial biomass (Cmic) was determined by the method of substrate-induced respiration; we also determined the rate of basal (microbial) respiration (BR) and the organic carbon content, pH, and particle-size distribution. Overall, 237 samples from Serpukhov district and 45 samples from Podol’sk district were analyzed. The BR/Cmic ratios (respiration quotient qCO2) and Cmic/Corg ratios were calculated. The Cmic content in the soils ranged from 43 to 1394 μg C/kg; the BR varied from 0.06 to 25 μg CO2-C/g per h, qCO2, from 0.34 to 6.52 μg CO2-C/mg Cmic per h; and the Cmic/Corg ratio, from 0.19 to 10.65%. It was found that the most significant factors affecting the variability of the Cmic and BR are the parameters of ecosystem (50% and 80%, respectively) and soil (30% and 9%, respectively). The most significant variability of these indices was found in forest soils; it was mainly controlled by the soil texture (33 and 23%) and the Corg content (19 and 24%). The Cmic parameter made it possible to differentiate the soils of the territory for the purposes of their evaluation, monitoring, and biological assessment more clearly than the BR value and the soil chemical characteristics.  相似文献   

7.
An incubation experiment was carried out to investigate the interactions of two straw qualities differing in N content and two soils differently accustomed to straw additions. One soil under conventional farming management (CFM) regularly received straw, the other soil under organic farming management (OFM) only farmyard manure. The soils of the two sites were similar in texture, pH, cation‐exchange capacity, and glucosamine content. The soil from the OFM site had higher contents of organic C, total N, muramic acid, microbial biomass C and N (Cmic and Nmic), but a lower ergosterol content and lower ratios ergosterol to Cmic and fungal C to bacterial C. The straw from the CFM had threefold higher contents of total N, twofold higher contents of ergosterol and glucosamine, a 50% higher content of muramic acid, and a 30% higher fungal C–to–bacterial C ratio. The straw amendments led to significant net increases in Cmic, Nmic, and ergosterol. Microbial biomass C showed on average a 50% higher net increase in the organic than in the CFM soil. In contrast, the net increases in Nmic and ergosterol differed only slightly between the two soils after straw amendment. The CO2 evolution from the CFM soil always exceeded that from the OFM, by 50% or 200 µg (g soil)–1 in the nonamended control soil and by 55% or additional 600 µg (g soil)–1 in the two straw treatments. In both soils, 180 µg g–1 less was evolved as CO2‐C from the OFM straw. The metabolic quotient qCO2 was nearly twice as high in the control and in the straw treatments of the CFM soil compared with that of the OFM. In contrast, the difference in qCO2 was insignificant between the two straw qualities. Differences in the fungal‐community structure may explain to a large extent the difference in the microbial use of straw in the two soils under different managements.  相似文献   

8.
In two layers of the humus horizons in soddy-podzolic soils of different biogeocenoses (Kostroma oblast) representing a succession series, the carbon content in the microbial biomass (Cmic) was determined using the method of substrate-induced respiration and the rate of microbial CO2 production (basal respiration, BR). The Cmic content was from 110 to 755 μg/g soil, and the BR was from 0.40 to 2.52 μg CO2-C/g/h. A gradual increase in the Cmic content and BR was found in the following sequence: cropland—fallow (7-year-old)—young (20- and 45-year-old) forests—secondary and native (primary) forests (90- and 450-year-old, respectively). In the litter, the Cmic content was higher in the 45-year-old forest than in the secondary and native forests: 10423, 6459, and 4258 μg C/g of substrate, respectively. The portion of Cmic in the soil organic carbon content in the upper layer of the soils studied varied from 1.3 to 5.4%; its highest value was in the soils under the secondary and native forests. The pool of microbial biomass carbon and the microbial CO2 production in the upper 25-cm layer of the soils were calculated.  相似文献   

9.
Microbial communities in floodplain soils are exposed to periodical flooding. A long-term submerged Eutric Gleysol (GLe), an intermediate flooded Eutric Fluvisol (FLe), and a short-time flooded Mollic Fluvisol (FLm) at the Elbe River (Germany) with similar organic carbon contents (Corg) between 8.1% and 8.9% were selected to test the quality of phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA), soil microbial carbon (Cmic), basal respiration (BR), metabolic quotient (qCO2), and Cmic/Corg ratio to characterize and discriminate these soils with microbial parameters.The three floodplain soils can be differentiated by Cmic and by total PLFA-biomass. Due to the different flooding durations and the time since the soils were last flooded Cmic and PLFA-biomass increase in the order GLe<FLe<FLm. Both parameters correlate significantly (r=0.999;p<0.05). The Cmic/Corg ratios are low in comparison to terrestrial soils and revealed the same ranking over the three soils like Cmic. Contrary, qCO2 and BR are highest in GLe and lowest in FLm according to inundation regime. The diminished Cmic, high BR, and high qCO2 values in GLe seem to be an unspecific response of aerobic soil microorganisms on the long flooding period and the resulting short time for developing after last flooding as well as the low pH value. Different plant communities and their residues may influence the microbial diversity additionally.The PLFA profiles were dominated by the group of saturated fatty acids that together constituted almost 62-72% of the total fatty acids identified in the soils. In GLe all groups of PLFA, inclusive monounsaturated fatty acids, are lowest and in FLm highest, while in FLe the PLFA fractions show an intermediary amount of the three soils. The FLm had most of the time aerobic conditions and revealed therefore the highest Cmic, PLFA-biomass, especially monounsaturated fatty acids, Cmic/Corg ratio as well as relatively low BR and qCO2 value. These indicate that microorganisms in FLm are more efficiently in using carbon sources than those in GLe and FLe.All 26 identified PLFA were found in FLe and FLm, while the polyunsaturated fungi biomarker 18:2ω6,9c could not be detected in GLe. In this long-time submerged soil the environmental conditions which microorganisms are exposed might be disadvantageous for fungi.  相似文献   

10.
Management of soil ecosystems requires assessment of key soil physicochemical and microbial properties and the spatial scale over which they operate. The objectives were to determine the spatial structure of microbial biomass and activity and related soil properties, and to identify spatial relationships of these properties in prairie soils under different management histories. Soil were sampled along a transect at 0.2 m intervals in each of five long-term treatments, namely, undisturbed, cattle grazed at two intensities, and cultivated with either wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) or cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.). Contents of organic carbon (Corg), dissolved organic C (DOC), soluble nitrogen (Nsol), and microbial biomass C (Cmic) and N (Nmic) as well as dehydrogenase activity (DH) in 70 samples were evaluated. Results showed that long-term soil management altered the spatial structure and dependence of Corg and microbial biomass and activity. Cultivation has contributed to high nugget variance for Corg, Cmic, Nmic and DH which interfered with detection of spatial structure at the sampling scale used. Contents of Corg were spatially connected to microbial biomass and activity and to DOC in the uncultivated but not in the cultivated soils, indicating that various factors affected by management may operate at different spatial scales.  相似文献   

11.
Interactions between microbial communities and organic matter were analyzed for soils from the project regions ’︁Ecosystem Research in the Agricultural Landscape/FAM, Munich’ in southern Germany and ’︁Ecosystem Research in the Bornhöved Lake district’ from northern Germany using ratios between microbial biomass content (Cmic), microbial metabolic quotient (qCO2) and organic carbon content (Corg). In the agricultural soils in southern Germany, the qCO2/Corg ratio differed significantly with respect to agricultural management in contrast to ecophysiological Cmic/Corg ratio. In addition, Cmic/Corg ratio decreased from 39 to 21 mg Cmic g—1 Corg and qCO2/Corg ratio increased from 72 to 180 mg CO2‐C g—1 Cmic h—1 (g Corg g—1 soil)—1 with increasing soil depth. For the upper soil horizons from the landscape in northern Germany the two quotients differed significantly with reference to land use showing highest microbial colonization under grassland and lowest under beech forest. In contrast, C use efficiency was lowest in arable field under maize monoculture and highest in a wet grassland having a high organic C content.  相似文献   

12.
Tree species differ in their effect on soil development and nutrient cycling. Conversion of beech coppice to pine plantations can alter soil physical and chemical properties, which in turn may have significant impacts on soil microbial biomass C and N (Cmic, Nmic). The major objective of this study was to evaluate soil quality changes associated with the forest conversion in humid NW Turkey. Results from this study showed that levels of soil organic carbon (Corg), total nitrogen (Nt), moisture, Cmic and Nmic under beech coppice were consistently higher but levels of pH, CaCO3 and EC were lower compared to pine plantation. Differences between the forest stands in Cmic and Nmic were mainly related to the size of the Corg stores in soil and to tree species. In addition, high level of CaCO3 is likely to reduce pools of soil organic C and possibly even microbial biomass C and N in pine forests. The average Cmic:Nmic ratios were higher in soils under beech coppice than pine plantation, while Cmic:Corg and Nmic:Nt percentages were similar in both forest types. These results revealed the differences in microbial community structure associated with different tree species and the complex interrelationships between microbial biomass, soil characteristics, litter quantity and quality. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
In the mineral horizons of the soils under different southern taiga forests (oak, archangel spruce, and aspen in the Kaluzhskie Zaseki Reserve of Kaluga region and the green moss spruce and spruce-broadleaved forests of the Zvenigorod Biological Station of Moscow State University in Moscow region), the carbon content in the microbial biomass (Cmic), the rate of the basal respiration (BR), and the specific microbial respiration (qCO2= BR/Cmic) were determined. The Cmic content was measured using the method of substrate-induced respiration (SIR). In the upper humus horizons of the soils, the Cmic content amounted to 762–2545 μg/g and the BR ranged from 1.59 to 7.55 μg CO2-C/g per h. The values of these parameters essentially decreased down the soil profiles. The portion of Cmic in the organic carbon of the humus horizons of the forest soils was 4.4 to 13.2%. The qCO2values increased with the depth in the soils of the Biological Station and did not change in the soils of the Reserve. The pool of Cmic and Corg and the microbial production of CO2 (BR) within the forest soil profiles are presented.  相似文献   

14.
A study was conducted to examine the responses of microbial activity and nitrogen (N) transformations along an altitudinal gradient. The gradient was divided into three parts. Three areas were sampled: upper part (UP): coniferous forest, corn field, and abandoned corn field; middle part (MP): tropical cloud forest, grassland, and corn field (COL); and lower part (LP): tropical deciduous forest and sugarcane. The results showed that soil microbial biomass carbon (C) and basal respiration were significantly higher in MP and UP than in LP, whereas the microbial quotient (Cmic/Corg) was higher in LP and MP than in UP. The metabolic quotient (qCO2) was similar among gradient parts evaluated. Net N mineralization, ammonification, and nitrification rates were higher in UP than MP and LP. We found that in UP, the forest conversion to cropland resulted in no significant differences in microbial activity and N transformation rates between land uses. In MP, microbial biomass C, ammonification, and net N mineralization rates decreased significantly with conversion to cropland, but Cmic/Corg and nitrification were higher in COL. Basal respiration and qCO2 were significantly lower in COL when compared with other land uses. In LP, lower microbial biomass C, Cmic/Corg, and nitrification rates but higher ammonification and net N mineralization rates were observed in tropical deciduous forest than in sugarcane. No significant differences in basal respiration and qCO2 were found between uses of LP. Clearly, then, soil organic C is not equally accessible to the microbial community along the gradient studied. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

15.
 A study of the effects of different qualities (fresh and composted) and rates (equivalent to 120, 240, and 360 kg N ha–1) of mustard meal application on wheat yields on humid tropical vertisol was started in 1990 at Ginchi Research Station in Ethiopia. After continuous wheat cropping for 7 years and without any further fertilisation, soil microbial parameters (basal respiration, microbial biomass-C and N, organic-C, and ecophysiological quotients) were studied during one growth period. After 7 years of application, mustard meal still exerted a significant positive effect on microbial biomass, basal respiration, organic-C, Cmic : Nmic ratio, and metabolic quotient (qCO2). Organic-C, qCO2 and Cmic : Nmic ratios were higher for the compost-amended plots than plots amended with fresh mustard meal. Basal respiration, Cmic, and Cmic : Nmic ratio showed a clear seasonality, but only in manured plots. The data indicate shifts in microbial community structure (from bacteria to fungi and from r to K strategists) and suggest positive medium-term effects of mustard meal on humid tropical vertisol biological qualities. Received: 25 May 1999  相似文献   

16.
In 11 rain‐fed arable soils of the Potohar plateau, Pakistan, the amounts of microbial‐biomass C (Cmic), biomass N (Nmic), and biomass P (Pmic) were analyzed in relation to the element‐specific total storage compartment, i.e., soil Corg, Nt, and Pt. The effects of climatic conditions and soil physico‐chemical properties on these relationships were highlighted with special respect to crop yield levels. Average contents of soil Corg, Nt, and Pt were 3.9, 0.32, and 0.61 mg (g soil)–1, respectively. Less than 1% of Pt was extractable with 0.5 M NaHCO3. Mean contents of Cmic, Nmic, and Pmic were 118.4, 12.0, and 3.9 µg (g soil)–1. Values of Cmic, Nmic, Pmic, soil Corg, and Nt were all highly significantly interrelated. The mean crop yield level was closely connected with all soil organic matter– and microbial biomass–related properties, but showed also some influence by the amount of precipitation from September to June. Also the fraction of NaHCO3‐extractable P was closely related to soil organic matter, soil microbial biomass, and crop yield level. This reveals the overwhelming importance of biological processes for P turnover in alkaline soils.  相似文献   

17.
The values of the soil-ecological index and microbiological parameters (the carbon of microbial biomass Cmic, its ratio to the total organic carbon Cmic/Corg, and basal respiration) were determined for the soddy-podzolic, soddy-gley, bog-podzolic, meadow alluvial, and gray forest soils under different land uses (forest, fallow, cropland, and urban areas) in the Podolsk and Serpukhov districts of Moscow oblast (237 and 45 sampling points, respectively). The soil sampling from the upper 10 cm (without the litter horizon) was performed in September and October. To calculate the soil-ecological index, both soil (physicochemical and agrochemical) and climatic characteristics were taken into account. Its values for fallow, cropland, and urban ecosystems averaged 70.2, 72.8, and 64.2 points (n = 90, 17, and 24, respectively). For the soils of forest ecosystems, the average value of the soil-ecological index was lower (54.4; n = 151). At the same time, the micro-biological characteristics of the studied forest soils were generally higher than those in the soils of fallow, cropland, and urban ecosystems. In this context, to estimate the soil quality in different ecosystems on the basis of the soil-ecological index, the use of a correction coefficient for the biological properties of the soils (the Cmic content) was suggested. The ecological substantiation of this approach for assessing the quality of soils in different ecosystems is presented in the paper.  相似文献   

18.
Urban soils (constructozems) were studied in Moscow and several cities (Dubna, Pushchino, and Serebryanye Prudy) of Moscow oblast. The soil sampling from the upper 10-cm-thick layer was performed in the industrial, residential, and recreational functional zones of these cities. The biological (the carbon of the microbial biomass carbon, Cmic and the microbial (basal) respiration, BR) and chemical (pHwater and the contents of Corg, heavy metals, and NPK) indices were determined in the samples. The ratios of BR to Cmic (the microbial respiration quotient, qCO2) and of Cmic to Corg were calculated. The Cmic varied from 120 to 738 μg C/g soil; the BR, from 0.39 to 1.94 μg CO2-C/g soil per hour; the Corg, from 2.52 to 5.67%; the qCO2, from 1.24 to 5.28 μg CO2-C/mg Cmic/g soil per h; and the Cmic/Corg, from 0.40 to 1.55%. Reliable positive correlations were found between the Cmic and BR, the Cmic and Cmic/Corg, and the Cmic and Corg values (r = 0.75, 0.95, and 0.61, respectively), as well as between the BR and Cmic/Corg values (r = 0.68). The correlation between the Cmic/Corg and qCO2 values was negative (r = −0.70). The values of Cmic, BR, Corg, and Cmic/Corg were found to correlate with the ammonium nitrogen content. No correlative relationships were revealed between the determined indices and the climatic characteristics. The principal component analysis described 86% of the variances for all the experimental data and clearly subdivided the locations of the studied soil objects. The ANOVA showed that the variances of Cmic, Corg, and BR are controlled by the site location factor by 66, 63, and 35%, respectively. The specificity of the functioning of the anthropogenic soils as compared with their natural analogues was clearly demonstrated. As shown in this study, measurable biological indices might be applied to characterize the ecological, environmental-regulating, and productive functions of soils, including urban soils.  相似文献   

19.
In the humus horizon of soddy-podzolic soils of postagrogenic cenoses and primary forests, the contributions of the fungi and bacteria were determined by the selective inhibition of the substrate-induced respiration (SIR) by antibiotics; the basal (microbial) respiration and the net-produced nitrous oxide (N2O) were also determined. The procedure of the SIR separation using antibiotics (cycloheximide and streptomycin) into the fungal and bacterial components was optimized. It was shown that the fungi: bacteria ratio was 1.58, 2.04, 1.55, 1.39, 2.09, and 1.86 for the cropland, fallow, and different-aged forests (20, 45, 90, and 450 years), respectively. The fungal and bacterial production of CO2 in the primary forest soil was higher than in the cropland by 6.3 and 11.4 times, respectively. The production of N2O in the soils of the primary and secondary (90-year-old) forests (3 and 7 ng N-N2O/g soil per hour, respectively) was 2–13 times lower than in the postagrogenic cenoses, where low values were also found for the microbial biomass carbon (Cmic), its components (the Cmic-bacteria and Cmic-fungi), and the portion of Cmic in the organic carbon of the soil. A conclusion was drawn about the misbalance of the microbial processes in the overgrown cropland accompanied by the increased production of N2O by the soil during its enrichment with an organic substrate (glucose).  相似文献   

20.
Increasing nutrient inputs into terrestrial ecosystems affect not only plant communities but also associated soil microbial communities. Studies carried out in predominantly unmanaged ecosystems have found that increasing nitrogen (N) inputs generally decrease soil microbial biomass; less is known about long-term impacts in managed systems such as agroecosystems. The objective of this paper was to analyze the responses of soil microorganisms to mineral fertilizer using data from long-term fertilization trials in cropping systems. A meta-analysis based on 107 datasets from 64 long-term trials from around the world revealed that mineral fertilizer application led to a 15.1% increase in the microbial biomass (Cmic) above levels in unfertilized control treatments. Mineral fertilization also increased soil organic carbon (Corg) content and our results suggest that Corg is a major factor contributing to the overall increase in Cmic with mineral fertilization. The magnitude of the effect of fertilization on Cmic was pH dependent. While fertilization tended to reduce Cmic in soils with a pH below 5 in the fertilized treatment, it had a significantly positive effect at higher soil pH values. Duration of the trial also affected the response of Cmic to fertilization, with increases in Cmic most pronounced in studies with a duration of at least 20 years. The input of N per se does not seem to negatively affect Cmic in cropping systems. The application of urea and ammonia fertilizers, however, can temporarily increase pH, osmotic potential and ammonia concentrations to levels inhibitory to microbial communities. Even though impacts of fertilizers are spatially limited, they may strongly affect soil microbial biomass and community composition in the short term. Long-term repeated mineral N applications may alter microbial community composition even when pH changes are small. How specific microbial groups respond to repeated applications of mineral fertilizers, however, varies considerably and seems to depend on environmental and crop management related factors.  相似文献   

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