Ratios between estimates of microbial biomass content and microbial activity in soils

被引:1
|
作者
O. Dilly
J.-C. Munch
机构
[1] Ökologiezentrum,
[2] Universität Kiel,undefined
[3] Schauenburgerstraße 112,undefined
[4] D-24118 Kiel,undefined
[5] Germany,undefined
[6] Fax: +49 431 880 4083,undefined
[7] Institut für Bodenökologie,undefined
[8] Forschungszentrum für Umwelt und Gesundheit GmbH,undefined
[9] D-85758 Neuherberg,undefined
[10] Germany,undefined
来源
Biology and Fertility of Soils | 1998年 / 27卷
关键词
Key words Arginine-ammonification rate; Microbial biomass content; Microbial activities; Metabolic quotient; Ecosystem research;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
 The content levels and activities of the microbiota were estimated in topsoils and in one soil profile at agricultural and forest sites of the Bornhöved Lake district in northern Germany. Discrepancies between data achieved by fumigation-extraction (FE) and substrate-induced respiration (SIR), both used for the quantification of microbial biomass, were attributed to the composition of the microbial populations in the soils. In the topsoils, the active, glucose-responsive (SIR) versus the total, chloroform-sensitive microbial (FE) biomass decreased in the order; field maize monoculture (field-MM)>field crop rotation (field-CR) and dry grassland>beech forest. This ratio decreased within the soil profile of the beech forest from the litter horizon down to the topsoil. Differences between microbial biomass and activities suggested varying biomass-specific transformation intensities in the soils. The metabolic quotient (qCO2), defined as the respiration rate per unit of biomass, indicates the efficiency in acquiring organic C and the intensity of C mineralization, while biomass-specific arginine-ammonification (arginine-ammonification rate related to microbial biomass content) seems to be dependent on N availability. The qCO2, calculated on the basis of the total microbial biomass, decreased for the topsoils in the same order as did the ratio between the active, glucose-responsive microbial biomass to the total, chloroform-sensitive microbial biomass, in contrast to qCO2 values based on the glucose-responsive microbial biomass, which did not. There was no difference between the levels of biomass-specific arginine-ammonification in topsoils of the fertilized field-CR, fertilized field-MM, fertilized dry grassland and eutric alder forest, but levels were lower in the beech forest, dystric alder forest, and unfertilized wet grassland topsoils. Ratios between values of different microbiological features are suggested to be more useful than microbiological features related to soil weight when evaluating microbial populations and microbially mediated processes in soils.
引用
收藏
页码:374 / 379
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Ratios between estimates of microbial biomass content and microbial activity in soils
    Dilly, O
    Munch, JC
    BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS, 1998, 27 (04) : 374 - 379
  • [2] Effect of Charcoal Quantity on Microbial Biomass and Activity in Temperate Soils
    Kolb, Simone E.
    Fermanich, Kevin J.
    Dornbush, Mathew E.
    SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 2009, 73 (04) : 1173 - 1181
  • [3] Microbial biomass and activity in salt affected soils under and conditions
    Yuan, Bing-Cheng
    Li, Zi-Zhen
    Liu, Hua
    Gao, Meng
    Zhang, Yan-Yu
    APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2007, 35 (02) : 319 - 328
  • [4] Microbial biomass and activity in alkalized magnesic soils under arid conditions
    Yuan, Bing-Cheng
    Xu, Xue-Gong
    Li, Zi-Zhen
    Gao, Tian-Peng
    Gao, Meng
    Fan, Xian-Wei
    Deng, Han-Ming
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2007, 39 (12): : 3004 - 3013
  • [5] Microbial respiration per unit biomass increases with carbon-to-nutrient ratios in forest soils
    Spohn, Marie
    Chodak, Marcin
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2015, 81 : 128 - 133
  • [6] Precipitation regime drives warming responses of microbial biomass and activity in temperate steppe soils
    Liu, Weixing
    Allison, Steven D.
    Xia, Jianyang
    Liu, Lingli
    Wan, Shiqiang
    BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS, 2016, 52 (04) : 469 - 477
  • [7] Precipitation regime drives warming responses of microbial biomass and activity in temperate steppe soils
    Weixing Liu
    Steven D. Allison
    Jianyang Xia
    Lingli Liu
    Shiqiang Wan
    Biology and Fertility of Soils, 2016, 52 : 469 - 477
  • [8] The application of sewage sludge affects, in the short term, microbial biomass and its activity in sodic soils
    del Rocio Medina-Herrera, Miriam
    Xochilt Negrete-Rodriguez, Maria de la Luz
    Paul Gamez-Vazquez, Francisco
    Alvarez-Bernal, Dioselina
    Conde-Barajas, Eloy
    REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE CONTAMINACION AMBIENTAL, 2020, 36 (03): : 577 - 591
  • [9] Microbial biomass and activities in urban soils in two consecutive years
    Lorenz, Klaus
    Kandeler, Ellen
    JOURNAL OF PLANT NUTRITION AND SOIL SCIENCE, 2006, 169 (06) : 799 - 808
  • [10] Evaluation of Microbial Biomass and Activity in Different Soils Exposed to Increasing Level of Arsenic Pollution: A Laboratory Study
    Prasad, P.
    George, J.
    Masto, R. E.
    Rout, T. K.
    Ram, L. C.
    Selvi, V. A.
    SOIL & SEDIMENT CONTAMINATION, 2013, 22 (05): : 483 - 497