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Digestion and residue stabilization of bacterial and fungal cells,protein, peptidoglycan,and chitin by the geophagous earthworm Metaphire guillelmi
Affiliation:1. College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China;2. Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Solid Organic Waste Resource Utilization, Nanjing 210014, China;1. State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, School of the Environment, Nanjing University, 163 Xianlin Avenue, 210023 Nanjing, China;2. Department of Environmental Science, China Pharmaceutical University, 639 Longmian Avenue, 211198 Nanjing, China
Abstract:Microbial biomass is an important source of soil organic matter, which plays crucial roles in the maintenance of soil fertility and food security. However, the mineralization and transformation of microbial biomass by the dominant soil macrofauna earthworms are still unclear. We performed feeding trials with the geophagous earthworm Metaphire guillelmi using 14C-labelled bacteria (Escherichia coli and Bacillus megaterium) cells, fungal (Penicillium chrysogenum) cells, protein, peptidoglycan, and chitin. The mineralization rate of the microbial cells and cell components was significantly 1.2–4.0-fold higher in soil with the presence of M. guillelmi for seven days than in earthworm-free soil and 1–11-fold higher than in fresh earthworm cast material. When the earthworms were removed from the soil, the mineralization of the residual carbon of the microbial biomass was significantly lower than that in the earthworm-free soil, indicating that M. guillelmi affects the mineralization of the biomass in soil in two aspects: first stimulation and then reduction, which were attributed to the passage of the microbial biomass through the earthworm gut, and that the microorganisms in the cast could play only minor roles in the stimulated mineralization and residual stabilization of microbial biomass. Large amounts (8–29%) of radiolabel of the tested microbial biomass were assimilated in the earthworm tissue. Accumulation of fungal cells (11%) and cell wall component chitin (29%) in the tissue was significantly higher than that of bacterial cells (8%) and cell wall component peptidoglycan (15%). Feeding trails with 14C-lablled microbial cells and cell components provided direct evidence that microbial biomass is a food source for geophagous earthworm and fungal biomass is likely a more important food source for earthworms than bacterial biomass. Findings of this study have important implications for the roles of geophagous earthworms in the fate of microbial biomass in soil.
Keywords:Microbial biomass  Soil organic matter  Mineralization  Earthworm  Fungi  Bacteria
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