The effect of some carbon substrates on denitrification rates and carbon utilization in soil |
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Authors: | J B de Catanzaro E G Beauchamp |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Land Resource Science, University of Guelph, N1G 2w1 Guelph, Ontario, Canada |
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Abstract: | Summary Soil was amended with a variety of carbon sources, including four soluble compounds (glucose, sucrose, glycerol and mannitol) and two plant residues (straw and alfalfa).. Potential denitrification rates, measured both as N2O accumulation and NO3
– disappearance, were compared, and the predicted values of available C, measured as CO2 production and water-extractable C, were assessed.The two measures of denitrification agreed well although N2O accumulation was, found to be most sensitive. Soil treated with the four soluble C compounds resulted in the same rate of denitrification although glycerol was not as rapidly oxidized. Alfalfa-amended soil produced a significantly higher rate of denitrification than the same amount of added straw. CO2 evolution was found to be a good predictor of denitrification over the first 2 days of sampling, but neither measure of available substrate C correlated well with denitrification rate beyond 4 days, when NO3
– was depleted in most treatments. The data with alfalfa-amended soil suggested that denitrifiers used water-extractable C. materials produced by other organisms under anaerobic conditions. |
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Keywords: | Denitrification rates Carbon substrate N2O production Water-extractable carbon |
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