4.7 Article

Do organic inputs alter resistance and resilience of soil microbial community to drying?

Journal

SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 81, Issue -, Pages 58-66

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2014.10.028

Keywords

Carbon cycling; 13-C NMR; PLFA; Microbial activity; Grassland soil microbial community

Categories

Funding

  1. Monash Sustainability Institute Australia
  2. Brown Coal Innovation Australia
  3. Australian Research Council (ARC)
  4. ARC [FT120100463]

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Grassland ecosystems in south-eastern Australia are important for dairy and livestock farming. Their productivity relies heavily on water availability, as well as the ecosystem services provided by soil microbial communities including carbon and nutrient cycling. Management practices such as compost application are being encouraged as a means to improve both soil water holding capacity and fertility, thereby buffering against the impacts of increasing climate variability. Such buffering consists of two complementary processes: resistance, which measures the ability of an ecosystem to maintain community structure and function during a period of stress (such as drying); and resilience, which measures the ability of an ecosystem to recover community structure and function post-stress. We investigated the effects of compost on the resistance and resilience of the grassland soil ecosystem under drying and drying with rewetting events, in a terrestrial model ecosystem. Overall, compost addition led to an increase in soil moisture, greater plant available P and higher plant delta N-15. Soil C:nutrient ratios, mineral N content (NH4+ and NO3-) and soil microbial PLFA composition were similar between amended and unamended soils. Rainfall treatment led to differences in soil moisture, plant above-ground and below ground biomass, plant delta N-15, soil mineral N content (NH4+ and NO3-) and microbial biomass C, N and P composition but had no effects on soil C:nutrient ratios, plant available P and soil microbial PLFA composition. There was little interaction between rainfall and compost. Generally, the soil microbial community was resistant and resilient to fluctuations in rainfall regardless of compost amendment. However, these properties of the soil microbial community were translated to resilience and not resistance in soil functions. Overall, the results below-ground showed much greater response to rainfall than compost amendment. Water was the key factor shaping the soil microbial community, and nutrients were not strong co-limiting factors. Future projections of increasing rainfall variability will have important below-ground functional consequences in the grassland, including altered nutrient cycling. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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