Effect of Disposal of Effluent and Paunch from a Meat Processing Factory on Soil Chemical and Microbial Properties

被引:0
作者
Y.-Y. Liu
R. J. Haynes
机构
[1] The University of Queensland,School of Agriculture and Food Science/CRC CARE
来源
Water, Air, & Soil Pollution | 2013年 / 224卷
关键词
Meat processing factory effluent; Paunch; Catabolic function; Bacterial and fungal diversity; Microbial biomass;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The effects of irrigation with meat processing factory effluent (MPE) in combination with additions of paunch to three arable sites and one pasture site on soil chemical and microbial properties were investigated in fields surrounding a beef meat processing factory. A pasture site that had only received MPE was also sampled along with adjoining arable and pasture control fields that had never received MPE or paunch. Additions of MPE/paunch caused increases in electrical conductivity, exchangeable Na and K, exchangeable sodium percentage (ESP), extractable P, organic C, total N, microbial biomass C, and metabolic quotient and decreases in exchangeable Ca and Mg, pH, and the proportion of organic C present as microbial biomass. The structure and diversity of bacterial and fungal communities was measured by polymerase chain reaction–denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis of 16S rDNA and internal transcribed spacer-RNA amplicons respectively and catabolic diversity by analysis of catabolic response profiles to 25 substrates. Principal component analysis of catabolic response profiles clearly separated control from MPE/paunch-treated sites, and this was associated with greater catabolic responses to the carboxylic acids α-ketoglutaric, α-ketobutyric, l-ascorbic, and citric acid in the control. At the arable sites, application of MPE and paunch caused increases in bacterial, fungal, and catabolic diversity. Canonical correspondence analysis of the relationship between catabolic, bacterial, and fungal fingerprints and soil properties indicated that the main soil variables separating MPE/paunch treatments from controls were the higher organic C, ESP, and extractable P and a lower pH, exchangeable Ca, and Mg. It was concluded that, although long-term MPE/paunch additions induce soil salinity, sodicity, and acidity, in general, they cause an increase in the size, activity, and structural and functional diversity of in the soil microbial community.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 100 条
[1]  
Beauregard MS(2010)Long-term phosphorus fertilization impacts soil fungal and bacterial diversity but not AM fungal community in alfalfa Microbial Ecology 59 379-389
[2]  
Hamel C(1986)Effect of slaughterhouse effluent and water irrigation upon aggregation in seasonally dry New Zealand soil under pasture Australian Journal of Soil Research 24 505-516
[3]  
Nayyar A(1963)The estimation of phosphorus fertilizer requirements of wheat in southern New South Wales by soil analysis Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry 3 190-198
[4]  
St-Arnaud M(2001)Short-term effects of municipal solid waste compost amendments on soil carbon and nitrogen content, some enzyme activities and genetic diversity Biology and Fertility of Soils 34 311-318
[5]  
Churchman GJ(1997)Development of a physiological approach to measurement of metabolic diversity of soil microbial communities Soil Biology and Biochemistry 29 1309-1320
[6]  
Tate KR(2000)Decreases in organic C reserves in soils can reduce the catabolic diversity of soil microbial communities Soil Biology and Biochemistry 32 189-196
[7]  
Colwell JD(2001)Is the microbial community in a soil with reduced catabolic diversity less resistant to stress or disturbance Soil Biology and Biochemistry 33 1143-1153
[8]  
Crecchio C(1997)Agricultural intensification, soil biodiversity and agroecosystem function Applied Soil Ecology 6 3-16
[9]  
Cuci M(2000)Effect of meat works effluent irrigation on soil, tree biomass production and nutrient uptake in Eucalyptus globulus seedlings in growth cabinets Bioresource Technology 72 243-251
[10]  
Mininni R(2007)A review of non-equilibrium water flow and solute transport in soil macropores: Principles, controlling factors and consequences for water quality European Journal of Soil Science 58 523-546