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1.
A variety of soil properties can directly or indirectly affect nematode community structure. The effects of subsurface clay content (at 20–40 cm depth) on nematodes in the surface layer (0–20 cm depth) of a sandy soil were examined in field experiments in Florida, USA. Plots were established in a site with a relatively uniform sandy upper soil layer (88–91% sand and 5–7% clay at 0–20 cm depth) but with varying levels of clay in the subsurface layer (3–35% clay at 20–40 cm depth). Nematode numbers in the surface soil layer were affected by the amount of clay in the subsurface layer. Population densities of a number of different nematode genera were greater in the surface layer of plots with 35% subsurface clay than in plots with 3% subsurface clay. Indices of nematode community structure were largely unaffected, since effects of subsurface clay were observed across all nematode groups. Most nematodes (70–80% of total numbers) occurred at 0–20 cm depth, although Teratocephalus was more common at 20–40 than at 0–20 cm. Subsurface clay content indirectly affected soil moisture and other environmental factors in the upper soil layer in which most nematodes reside.  相似文献   

2.
To minimize application of nematicides in banana fields, crop systems have been developed in the French West Indies that combine fallow or rotation crops and nematode-free in vitro plants. After two to four years, populations of the burrowing nematode Radopholus similis have developed enough to cause economic losses, leading banana growers to use nematicides. To understand how banana fields are recontaminated, we studied the dissemination of R. similis by water flow. At a 1-m scale, we analyzed the dispersion of R. similis under a rainfall simulator: we isolated a 1-m2 study plot, placed a R. similis suspension on the upstream soil surface, and simulated a 60 mm/h rainfall for 72 min. We collected soil samples every 10 cm downstream after 12 min of rainfall, and subsequently at 20-min intervals, and extracted the nematodes using a Seinhorst elutriator and then a Baermann funnel. Our results showed that the nematode dissemination follows an inverse exponential law, and depends more on soil moisture at the beginning of rainfall than on the length of rainfall: in fresh soil, 69–80% of the R. similis recovered were found less than 10 cm downstream from the nematode inoculation line, whereas in wetted soil, 76–85% of the recovered individuals were collected in the outlet tub located downstream from the apparatus. This passive dissemination model partially explains the distance covered by individual nematodes but not the low percentage of motile nematodes recovered in the outlet tub (10% and 36% in fresh and wet soils) compared to the percentage of motile nematodes found in the soil (80% and 84% in fresh and wet soils). Indeed, water runoff is likely to disseminate R. similis over long distances only when soil moisture is close to field capacity.  相似文献   

3.
《Soil biology & biochemistry》2001,33(7-8):1095-1101
Biological and chemical components of soil fertility were quantified under three different fallow types and related to soil quality of an Ultisol in southern Cameroon at the end of a 9-month fallow. Soil organic matter (SOM), soil exchangeable Ca2+, Mg2+ and K+ and available P concentrations, effective cation exchange capacity (ECEC) and, soil acidity in the 0–10 and 10–20 cm layers were evaluated under: natural regrowth mainly composed of Chromolaena odorata and the legume cover crops velvet bean (Mucuna pruriens var. utilis) and kudzu (Pueraria phaseoloides). SOM quality was assessed by C mineralisation during a 4-week incubation at 28°C in the laboratory. In addition, particulate organic matter (POM), the most active part of SOM, was fractionated by wet sieving into coarse (4000–2000 μm), medium (2000–250 μm) and fine (250–53 μm) particle size classes and analysed for C and N contents. Under Mucuna, Ca2+, K+ and P concentrations, ECEC and soil pH were higher and C mineralisation was lower than under natural regrowth and Pueraria in 0–10 cm depth. Soil under natural regrowth had a higher C mineralisation in 0–10 cm indicating more labile SOM than in Pueraria and Mucuna fallow. There was no difference in weight of total POM, for any of the fractions between the three fallow types. However, both leguminous fallow species increased POM quality through a higher N content. Compared to natural regrowth, Pueraria increased N content in coarse POM by 36% in the 0–10 cm layer and by 19% (coarse POM) and 35% (medium POM) in the 10–20 cm layer. Mucuna increased N content in the 0–10 cm layer by 12% (coarse POM), and by 19% (fine POM), compared to natural regrowth. According to the differences in nutrient concentrations, soil acidity and the biological stability of SOM, the three fallow types ranked: MucunaPueraria>natural regrowth. However, in terms of POM quality the ranking was: Pueraria>Mucuna>natural regrowth.  相似文献   

4.
The species Chromolaena odorata (Asteraceae) is a notorious invasive shrub spreading throughout West and Central Africa and as such, there is a need to determine its environmental impact, particularly on soil biodiversity and functioning. Indeed, soil organisms such as earthworms are known to strongly influence soil properties and biogeochemical cycles. This study, conducted in Central Côte d’Ivoire, aims to investigate the temporal dynamics of earthworm communities in C. odorata fallows of different ages and to identify associated indicators and persistent species. Three distinct classes of fallows identified by local farmers, were considered: young (1–3 years, C1), medium-aged (4–8 years, C2) and old (>9 years, C3). Each of the classes included four plot replicates where earthworms were sampled using the Tropical Soil Biology and Fertility (TSBF) 25 cm × 25 cm × 30 cm soil monolith method. The study of earthworm communities was focused on density, biomass, diversity and complementarity. Indicator values (IndVals) were used to identify indicator species of the classes of fallows. The shrub exerted a mixed influence on earthworms depending on the functional group, with litter feeders and polyhumics declining over time as a result of a reduction of the litter availability on the soil surface. The species richness was significantly greater in C1 than in the other classes although the Shannon–Weaver's index did not vary significantly. However, a cluster analysis performed on densities highlighted marked differences between C2 and the two other classes in terms of community composition. Indicator species were found for C1 and C2. The geophagous Millsonia omodeoi has emerged as a persistent species as its density and biomass steadily increased so that it became the dominant species in old fallows. The roles of litters and soil parameters in influencing earthworm communities are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The response of the soil food web structure to soil quality changes during long-term anthropogenic disturbance due to farming practices has not been well studied. We evaluated the effects of three tillage systems: moldboard plow/rotary harrow (MP), rotary cultivator (RC), and no-tillage (NT), three winter cover-crop types (fallow, FL; rye, RY; and hairy vetch, HV), and two nitrogen fertilization rates (0 and 100 kg N ha−1 for upland rice, and 0 and 20 kg N ha−1 for soybean production) on changes in nematode community structure. Sixty-nine taxa were counted, total nematode abundance (ALL), bacterial feeders (BAC), predators (PRD), omnivores (OMN), and obligatory root feeders (ORF) were more abundant in NT than in MP and RC, but fungal feeders and facultative root feeders (FFR) were more abundant in RC than in NT and MP. Cover crop also influenced nematode community structure; rye and hairy vetch were always higher in ALL, BAC, FFR, ORF, and OMN than fallow. Seasonal changes in nematode community structure were also significant; in particular, as soil carbon increased, nematode abundance also increased. The relationship between nematode indices and soil carbon was significant only in NT, but not in MP and RC. In NT, with increasing soil carbon, enrichment index and structure index (SI) were positive and significant and channel index was negative. Bulk density was significantly negatively correlated with FFR and ORF. Seasonal difference in nematode community between summer and autumn was larger in an upland rice rotation than in a soybean rotation. Over the nine-year experiment, SI increased not only in NT but also in MP and RC, suggesting that repeated similar tillage inversions in agroecosystems may develop nematode community structures adapted to specific soil environmental conditions. Because NT showed the highest values of both SI and soil carbon, the increase of soil carbon in NT is expected to have a great impact on developing a more diverse nematode community structure.  相似文献   

6.
Fertilization generates nutrient patches that may impact soil microbial activity. In this study, nitrogen patches were generated by adding ammonium sulfate or urea to soil columns (length 25 cm; internal diameter 7.2 cm). Changes in nitrogen transformation, soil microbial biomass, and microbial functional diversity with the nitrogen gradients were investigated to evaluate the response of microbial activity to chemical fertilizer nutrient patches. After applying of ammonium sulfate or urea, the added nitrogen migrated about 7 cm. Microbial biomass carbon (MBC) was lower in fertilized soil than in the control (CK) treatment at the same soil layers. MBC increased with soil depth while microbial biomass nitrogen (MBN) decreased. BIOLOG analysis indicated that the average well color development (AWCD) and functional diversity indices of the microbial communities were lower in the 1 cm and 2 cm soil layers after application of ammonium sulfate; the highest values were in the 3 cm soil layer. AWCD and Shannon indices from the 1 to 5 cm soil layers were higher than those from other soil layers under urea application. Both principal component analysis and carbon substrate utilization analysis showed significant separation of soil microbial communities among different soil layers under application of ammonium sulfate or urea. Microbial activity was substantially decreased when NH4+-N concentration was higher than 528.5 mg kg−1 (1–3 cm soil layer under ammonium sulfate application) or 536.8 mg kg−1 (1 cm soil layer under urea application). These findings indicated that changes in soil microbial biomass and microbial functional diversity can occur with a nitrogen gradient. The extent of changes depends on the nitrogen concentration and the form of inorganic fertilizer.  相似文献   

7.
《Soil & Tillage Research》2007,93(1):138-151
Concerns about effects of increasing atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) on climate has given rise to the possibility of emission credits for soil organic carbon (SOC) sequestration. The goal of this study was to analyze SOC sequestration options in cropping systems of the Northern Guinea Savanna of West Africa. An 11-year experiment from the region, which consisted of 56 cropping system treatments that combined various crop rotation sequences with various input levels and an additional treatment of native grass fallow, was analyzed. Rotations included one or more of: sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench), cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.), groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.), maize (Zea mays L.) and native grass fallow. Inputs were defined by whether or not the plots were plowed and the addition of soil amendments (N, nitrogen; P, phosphorous; K, potassium; D, dolomite; CR, crop residues; CP, compost and ME, manure). Plots were moldboard plowed before seeding, except fallows, which were not plowed. Soil organic carbon in select treatments and residue yields from all cropped treatments were analyzed. The slope parameters from the regression analysis of SOC in the continuous fallow treatment were not significantly different from zero (P > 0.05), suggesting SOC (0.53% after 11 years) was at steady state in this treatment. Rotation and input significantly affected SOC (P < 0.05), but interaction effects were not significant. After 11 years, the cropped rotation with the greatest SOC was sorghum-fallow (0.46%), which was significantly greater (P < 0.05) than SOC in other the rotations measured: continuous cotton (0.36%), continuous sorghum (0.35%), and cotton–maize–sorghum (0.33%). For the input levels, addition of P, K, and ME gave the greatest SOC (0.44%) after 11 years of cropping, which was significantly greater (P < 0.05) than SOC from the N, P, K and D (0.37%), no input (0.32%) and N, P and K (0.34%) treatments. In addition, SOC with inputs of N, P, K and D (0.37%) was significantly greater than SOC with no input (0.32%). Three management practices, which had significantly greater SOC than others and were among the best for yields, were identified as sequestering management options for the region. These were rotating sorghum and fallow, and amending the soil with mineral P, K, and ME or N, P, K and D. However, potential drawbacks, such as a risk of reduced production with increased fallows, must be identified and addressed if the options are to be adopted.  相似文献   

8.
The aim of this study was to investigate the response of soil microbial biomass and organic matter fractions during the transition from conventional to organic farming in a tropical soil. Soil samples were collected from three different plots planted with Malpighia glaba: conventional plot with 10 years (CON); transitional plot with 2 years under organic farming system (TRA); organic plot with 5 years under organic farming system (ORG). A plot under native vegetation (NV) was used as a reference. Soil microbial biomass C (MBC) and N (MBN), soil organic carbon (SOC) and total N (TN), soil organic matter fractioning and microbial indices were evaluated in soil samples collected at 0–5, 5–10, 10–20 and 20–40 cm depth. SOC and fulvic acids fraction contents were higher in the ORG system at 0–5 cm and 5–10 cm depths. Soil MBC was highest in the ORG, in all depths, than in others plots. Soil MBN was similar between ORG, TRA and NV in the surface layer. The lowest values for soil MBC and MBN were observed in CON plot. Soil microbial biomass increased gradually from conventional to organic farming, leading to consistent and distinct differences from the conventional control by the end of the second year.  相似文献   

9.
《Applied soil ecology》2006,32(3):186-198
Comparisons of organic and inorganic fertilizer effects on nematode communities depend on the specific organic fertilizer used. Field experiments were conducted during 2001 and 2002 in a squash (Cucurbita pepo) agroecosystem to determine if applying sunn hemp (Crotalaria juncea) hay as an organic fertilizer improved nematode communities involved in soil nutrient cycling compared to an equivalent N rate (100 kg N/ha) of ammonium nitrate. Fertilizer source had minimal effect on nematode communities in 2001 when treatments were applied after a winter cover crop of oats (Avena sativa), but differences (P  0.05) between the fertilizer sources occurred in 2002 when no winter cover cropping preceded squash. Fertilization with sunn hemp hay increased abundance of the bacterivore guilds Ba1 and Ba2, and increased fungivores at the end of the experiment. Compared to ammonium nitrate, fertilization with sunn hemp hay resulted in a community with lower maturity index, higher enrichment index, and lower channel index, consistent with a disturbed and nutrient-enriched soil food web undergoing bacterial decomposition. Sunn hemp hay occasionally stimulated omnivorous nematodes, but suppressed plant-parasitic nematodes relative to ammonium nitrate fertilizer. Increasing the sunn hemp hay rate to 200 kg N/ha increased the abundance of bacterivores, fungivores, and predatory nematodes, and total nematode abundance compared to hay at 100 kg N/ha. Fertilization with ammonium nitrate increased the percentage of herbivores, but reduced percentage and abundance of omnivores. In conclusion, sunn hemp fertilizer maintained greater numbers of nematodes involved in nutrient cycling as compared to ammonium nitrate.  相似文献   

10.
《Applied soil ecology》2001,16(1):23-34
The succession of soil nematodes from initial planting with Pinus sylvestris seedling to about 30-year-old pine plantations on coal mining sands in the Lusatian lignite-mining district near Cottbus (Germany) was studied and compared with the nematode fauna of a 40-year-old semi-natural pine forest on naturally formed sandy soil. The initial stage was primarily characterised by a very low abundance (20×103 individuals/m2), which increased over a period of two years to values common in older pine plantations (500–600×103 individuals/m2). In the semi-natural forest the mean abundance of nematodes was about 1300×103 individuals/m2. Populations of Tardigrada, Rotifera and Enchytraeidae also increased with stand age. Nematode biomass increased from 49 to 543 mg m−2 in pine plantations and slightly decreased in the semi-natural forest to 301 mg m−2 over the period of investigation. The early colonisation of the initial stage was by bacterivorous (Acrobeloides) and fungal feeding (Aphelenchoides) nematodes, but the communities diversified as succession progressed with bacterivorous nematodes of the genera Plectus, Wilsonema and Metateratocephalus, root-fungal feeding Filenchus, omnivorous Aporcelaimellus and Eudorylaimus, and predacious Prionchulus becoming abundant. The abundance of plant-parasitic nematodes was very low. The greatest number of nematode genera was found in the semi-natural forest.  相似文献   

11.
《Applied soil ecology》2011,47(3):355-371
Secondary succession of nematodes was studied in 1–48-year-old abandoned fields on cambisols in South Bohemia, Czech Republic, and compared with cultivated field and sub-climax oak forests. Bacterivores were the predominant group in the cultivated field whereas in forests root-fungal feeders (mainly Filenchus) were almost as abundant as bacterivores. The total abundance of nematodes in the cultivated field averaged 868 × 103 ind m−2. During the first three years of succession the abundance practically did not change (775 × 103 ind m−2), the fauna was still similar to that in cultivated field but the biomass increased mainly due to Aporcelaimellus. Then the abundance increased up to 3731 × 103 ind m−2 in 7–8-year-old abandoned fields, plant parasites (Helicotylenchus) dominated and the fungal-based decomposition channel was activated. Later the abundance stabilised at between 1086 and 1478 × 103 ind m−2 in 13–25-year-old successional meadow stages with high population densities of omnivores and predators. The total abundance of nematodes was low in the 12–13-year-old willow shrub stage (594 × 103 ind m−2), increased in the 35–48-year-old birch shrub stage (1760 × 103 ind m−2) and the nematode fauna developed towards a forest community. The diversity and maturity of nematode communities generally increased with the age of abandoned fields but the highest values were in meadow stages (81–113 species, 57–68 genera, MI 2.73–3.30). The development of meadow arrested succession towards forests or diverted succession towards a waterlogged ecosystem. The succession of nematodes was influenced by the method of field abandonment (bare soil vs. legume cover, mowing) that affected the formation of either a shrub or meadow stage, and by the soil water status. The composition of the nematode fauna indicated that the soil food web could recover faster from agricultural disturbance under successive meadows than under shrubs.  相似文献   

12.
《Soil biology & biochemistry》2001,33(7-8):983-996
We investigated the influence of earthworms on the three-dimensional distribution of soil organic carbon (SOC) in a chisel-tilled soil. By burrowing, foraging, and casting at the surface and throughout the soil, anecic earthworms such as Lumbricus terrestris L. may play a major role in regulating the spatial distribution of organic matter resources both at the surface and within the soil. In the fall of 1994, we manipulated ambient earthworm communities, which were without deep burrowing species, by adding 100 earthworm individuals m−2 in spring and fall for 3 years. Overall, the biomass of L. terrestris was increased with earthworm additions and total earthworm biomass declined compared with ambient control treatments. To investigate the spatial variability in soil organic carbon due to this shift in earthworm community structure, we sampled soil on a 28×24 cm grid from the surface to 40 cm in four layers, 10 cm deep. Samples were analyzed for total carbon. We found that additions of anecic earthworms significantly increased average soil organic carbon content from 16.1 to 17.9 g C kg−1 for the 0–10 cm soil, and from 12.4 to 14.7 g kg−1 at 10–20-cm depth, and also changed the spatial distribution of soil organic carbon from uniform to patchy, compared with the ambient treatment.  相似文献   

13.
《Applied soil ecology》2000,14(1):27-36
The nematode communities of 36 grassland ecosystems in Romania, belonging to different plant associations and soil types, were studied. The abundance of nematodes, the species and trophic types present, as well as their distribution in relation to plant community and soil characteristics are analyzed and discussed.The abundance of nematodes from the 36 grasslands studied ranged between 0.41 × 106 and 8.57 × 106 individuals/m2, and a total of 121 genera and 145 species of nematodes were found. The highest diversity was found in grasslands developed on brown earth soil (65–67 genera and 74–76 species), with least diversity in those evolving on podzol and lithosol (33–36 genera with 25–28 identified species). Most of the dominant taxa were found in specific soil layers; some obligate plant parasitic genera (e.g., Paratylenchus, Rotylenchus, Criconema) showed preference for deeper soil layers. The nematode diversity index (H′), with values ranging between 2.38 and 3.47, did not differ significantly between the different types of grasslands. Plant feeding, bacterial feeding, hyphal feeding and omnivorous nematodes were the main groups in mountainous grasslands developed on different soil types. Plant feeding and bacterial feeding nematodes dominated the trophic structure and more plant feeders (62–69%) were found in communities of subalpine and alpine grasslands developed on podzol and alpine meadow soil, than in those developed on rendzina and lithosol (27–33%). The ratio of hyphal feeding to bacterial feeding nematodes (Hf/Bf) is constantly in favour of the bacterial feeding group, the values being an indicator of good soil fertility for most studied grasslands. The nematode communities of grasslands are grouped into six main clusters according to their genera affinity and distinguished by different grassland and soil types. Communities from subalpine grasslands developed on rendzina, acid brown and lithosol have the greatest similarities. An ordination of nematode communities in relation to important environmental variables is presented. Environmental variables relevant in explaining the patterns of nematode composition in grasslands, using canonical correspondence analysis (CCA), are: humus, pH, total nitrogen, exchangeable bases and soil type. No single factor could be selected.  相似文献   

14.
Soil food webs cycle nutrients and regulate parasites and pathogens, services essential for both agricultural productivity and ecosystem health. Nematodes provide useful indicators of soil food web dynamics. This study was conducted to determine if nematode soil food web indicators and crop yield can be enhanced by combinations of cover crops in a conservation tillage system. The effects of three cover crop treatments (vetch/pea, oat/wheat and oat/wheat/pea/vetch) with low, medium and high C:N and a bare fallow control were investigated in Davis, CA. Nematode fauna, soil properties and plant productivity were measured. Soil food web indices, including the Enrichment Index (EI), Structure Index (SI), Basal Index (BI), and Channel Index (CI), based on the composition of nematode assemblages, were calculated to infer soil food web condition. Cover cropped tomato/corn rotations had twice the number of enrichment opportunist bacterial feeding nematodes, active participants in nitrogen mineralization, than fallowed tomato/corn rotations (opportunist bacterial feeders = 163 versus 98). In winter fallowed plots food webs were basal, common in disturbed, nutrient-poor conditions (BI = 37). Total number of enrichment opportunist nematodes, soil NH4-N levels, and inferred nitrogen mineralization, were higher in cover crop treatments with low to mid C:N ratios. Omnivore and predator nematodes were scarce, averaging less than 6 nematodes 100 g?1 in all treatments. In year one, plant productivity was highest after fallow. In contrast, in year two productivity was highest after cover crops with high nitrogen content and productivity significantly correlated with the structure of the soil fauna. Monitoring the abundance of enrichment opportunists may provide managers with a new tool to evaluate soil food web nitrogen mineralization and plant productivity.  相似文献   

15.
This study investigates how carbon sources of soil microbial communities vary with soil depth. Microbial phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) were extracted from 0–20, 20–40 and 40–60 cm depth intervals from agricultural soils and analysed for their stable carbon isotopes (δ13C values). The soils had been subjected to a vegetation change from C3 (δ13C≈?29.3‰) to C4 plants (δ13C≈?12.5‰) 40 years previously, which allowed us to trace the carbon flow from plant-derived input (litter, roots, and root exudates) into microbial PLFA. While bulk soil organic matter (SOM) reflected ≈12% of the C4-derived carbon in top soil (0–20 cm) and 3% in deeper soil (40–60 cm), the PLFA had a much higher contribution of C4 carbon of about 64% in 0–20 cm and 34% in 40–60 cm. This implies a much faster turnover time of carbon in the microbial biomass compared to bulk SOM. The isotopic signature of bulk SOM and PLFA from C4 cultivated soil decreases with increasing soil depth (?23.7‰ to ?25.0‰ for bulk SOM and ?18.3‰ to ?23.3‰ for PLFA), which demonstrates decreasing influence of the isotopic signature of the new C4 vegetation with soil depth. In terms of soil microbial carbon sources this clearly shows a high percentage of C4 labelled and thus young plant carbon as microbial carbon source in topsoils. With increasing soil depth this percentage decreases and SOM is increasingly used as microbial carbon source. Among all PLFA that were associated to different microbial groups it could be observed that (a) depended on availability, Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria prefer plant-derived carbon as carbon source, however, (b) Gram-positive bacteria use more SOM-derived carbon sources while Gram-negative bacteria use more plant biomass. This tendency was observed in all three-depth intervals. However, our results also show that microorganisms maintain their preferred carbon sources independent on soil depth with an isotopic shift of 3–4‰ from 0–20 to 40–60 cm soil depth.  相似文献   

16.
《Applied soil ecology》2007,35(2):380-389
To compare the impact of parasite control agents in sheep faeces, 1 kg quantities of fresh faeces were spread uniformly over 1 m2 pasture plots in June 2001 (winter; a time of high earthworm activity). Faecal treatments applied to five replicate plots were C− (none), C+ (from untreated sheep), B (from sheep with an intra-ruminal bolus releasing a benzimidazole anthelmintic—‘albendazole’), ML (from sheep with a bolus releasing a macrocyclic lactone anthelmintic—‘ivermectin’), F (from sheep receiving a daily feed supplement containing chlamydospores of the nematophagous fungus, Duddingtonia flagrans). The disappearance of faeces was assessed visually over the 50 days following faecal application, then soil samples were taken to assess: (a) populations of earthworms and other soil macrofauna, (b) nematodes and other soil microfauna, and (c) the presence of D. flagrans in soil. Faecal disappearance was greatest in F and C+ plots and least in ML and B plots at 12 and 23 days (P < 0.05). Earthworm casting after 23 and 50 days was greater (P < 0.05) in plots with faeces (C+, ML, F, but not B) than in plots without faeces (C−). Greater earthworm activity in plots with faeces was reflected in greater numbers of earthworms, cocoons and greater biomass m−2 than in C− plots. On the basis of faecal dry weight applied, F plots had most earthworms and ML plots the least. After 50 days total nematodes in 0–5 cm soil showed a treatment effect (P < 0.001), being more abundant in F, C+ and B than in C− and ML plots; enchytraeids, rotifers, tardigrades and copepods showed no treatment effects. A few nematode taxa (Acrobeles, Alaimus, Pungentus, Tylencholaimus) showed significant treatment effects. The greatest effect among nematodes was in nematode channel ratio (NCR) (P < 0.008), with a decrease in F plots; changes in NCR may reflect the impact of earthworm activity on soil processes rather than a direct effect of the fungal treatment on nematodes. D. flagrans did not become established in the soil. During the trial conditions were favourable for earthworms and their activity was high in all treatments receiving faeces, with F and ML plots being the extremes. There was an apparent shift towards fungal-mediated decomposition in F plots. At the end of the 50-day trial, in a period when earthworms were active, there was no evidence of differential effects of any of the anthelmintic treatments on environmental indicators.  相似文献   

17.
An orthogonal experiment (form L16(45)) was used to investigate how the soil nematode community (density, diversity, and faunal structure) and soil health were affected by hybrid napiergrass management. The experiment included four levels of the each of the following main factors: nitrogen fertilization, cutting frequency, cutting intensity, and irrigation. The soil nematode community was affected more by nitrogen fertilization and irrigation than by cutting frequency and cutting intensity. Hybrid napiergrass develops a large root system and the carbon stored in the roots might have buffered any adverse effects of cutting on soil nematodes in the present study. The responses to fertilization indicated that fertilization had both positive and negative effects on the soil community and that the net effect depended on the level of fertilization. Additional water applied in irrigation was detrimental to soil nematode communities in that it might reduce the oxygen content of soil and also increases the potential for the leaching of nutrients from soil. Additionally, we suggest that moderate N fertilization (460 kg ha−1 yr−1), moderate irrigation (one time yr−1 during the dry season), and cutting (three times per year at 20 cm height) will maintain soil health and provide substantial hybrid napiergrass yields.  相似文献   

18.
《Applied soil ecology》2007,35(1):128-139
We tested the effect of soil moisture on the performance of four entomopathogenic nematodes species that have recently shown promise for the control of white grubs, i.e., Heterorhabditis bacteriophora, H. zealandica, Steinernema scarabaei, and S. glaseri. Experiments for all four nematodes were conducted in sandy loam, for S. scarabaei also in loamy sand and silt loam. Infectivity was tested by exposing third-instar Japanese beetle, Popillia japonica, to nematodes in laboratory experiments and determining nematode establishment in the larvae and larval mortality. Nematode infectivity was the highest at moderate soil moistures (−10 to −100 kPa), and tended to be lower in wet (−1 kPa) and moderately dry (−1000 kPa) soil. In dry soil (−3000 kPa), only S. scarabaei showed some activity. S. scarabaei was active from −1 to −3000 kPa in all soil types but the range of highest activity was wider in loamy sand (−1 to −1000 kPa) than in loamy sand and silt loam (−10 to −100 kPa). Persistence was determined in laboratory experiments by baiting nematode-inoculated soil with larvae of the greater wax moth, Galleria mellonella. For both Heterorhabditis spp. persistence was short at −10 kPa, improved slightly at −100 kPa, significantly at −1000 kPa, and was the highest at −3000 kPa. Both Steinernema spp. persisted very well at −10 kPa. However, S. glaseri persistence was the shortest at −10 kPa but did not differ significantly at −100 to −3000 kPa, whereas S. scarabaei persistence was not affected by soil moisture. Our observations concur with previous observations on the effect of soil moisture on entomopathogenic nematodes but also show that moisture ranges for infectivity and persistence vary among species. Differences among species may be based on differences in size and behavioral and physiological adaptations.  相似文献   

19.
《Soil biology & biochemistry》2001,33(4-5):429-438
Microbivorous grazers are thought to enhance nutrient mineralization. The predicted effect of microbivory on nutrient cycling depends on the pore habitat model used. We evaluated CO2 evolution and mineral N content of an old field soil to test two alternative habitat hypotheses. The exclusion hypothesis predicts that nematodes are separated from their microbial food resources in water-filled pores when soils dry, resulting in slower rates of biogeochemical transformations. The enclosure hypothesis predicts that nematode densities increase relative to their forage in smaller, isolated water volumes when soils dry, accelerating rates of biogeochemical transformations. We investigated the effect of soil moisture on the relationship between microbial biomass, microbivorous and predaceous nematodes, soil respiration and mineral N concentrations in an old field five times during the course of a year.We could evaluate the validity of the two habitat hypotheses for the entire field only in August 1997 because that was the only sampling date when maximum water-filled pore diameters were smaller than microbivorous nematode body diameters in all sampled field locations. The mean microbivorous and predaceous nematode abundances for the field in August were greater than 6300 kg−1 and 80,000 kg−1, respectively. Accordingly, the exclusion hypothesis was rejected. Predaceous nematode abundance was markedly higher in August than at any other sampling date. The high abundance of predators present suggests that detrital resources were not limiting productivity and that predators and microbivores were in enclosures, allowing predators to efficiently access their prey. Spatial maps, in agreement with linear correlation analyses, suggest that under our driest sampling conditions, soil respiration and mineral N content were controlled by microbivory and predation.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the fate of root and litter derived carbon in soil organic matter and dissolved organic matter in soil profiles, in order to explain mechanisms of short-term soil carbon storage. A time series of soil and soil solution samples was investigated at the field site of The Jena Experiment between 2002 and 2004. In addition to the main experiment with C3 plants, a C4 species (Amaranthus retroflexus L.) naturally labeled with 13C was grown on an extra plot. Changes in organic carbon concentration in soil and soil solution were combined with stable isotope measurements to follow the fate of plant carbon into the soil and soil solution. A split plot design with plant litter removal versus double litter input simulated differences in biomass input. After 2 years, the no litter and double litter treatment, respectively, showed an increase of 381 g C m?2 and 263 g C m?2 to 20 cm depth, while 71 g C m?2 and 393 g C m?2 were lost between 20 and 30 cm depth. The isotopic label in the top 5 cm indicated that 115 g C m?2 and 156 g C m?2 of soil organic carbon were derived from C4 plant material on the no litter and the double litter treatment, respectively. Without litter, this equals the total amount of 97 g C m?2 that was newly stored in the same soil depth, whereas with double litter this clearly exceeded the stored amount of 75 g C m?2. Our results indicate that litter input resulted in lower carbon storage and larger carbon losses and consequently accelerated turnover of soil organic carbon. Isotopic evidence showed that inherited soil organic carbon was replaced by fresh plant carbon near the soil surface. Our results suggest that primarily carbon released from soil organic matter, not newly introduced plant organic matter, was transported in the soil solution. However, the total flow of dissolved organic carbon was not sufficient to explain the observed carbon storage in deeper soil layers, and the existence of additional carbon uptake mechanisms is discussed.  相似文献   

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