4.6 Article

Organic waste amendment effects on soil microbial activity in a corn-rye rotation: Application of a new approach to community-level physiological profiling

期刊

APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY
卷 44, 期 3, 页码 262-269

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsoil.2010.01.003

关键词

Soil respiration; Community-level physiological profiling: N limitation

资金

  1. Soil Processes Program of the Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (CSREES)
  2. United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
  3. CONICET (Argentina)
  4. UNS

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Organic fertilizers provide long-term benefits to agronomic soils, but sometimes cause short-term reductions in crop yield due to microbially mediated nitrogen (N) immobilization. A simple, rapid method to assess the integrated use of both, carbon (C) and N by soil microbial communities will be a useful monitoring tool in production agriculture. The present study evaluated a new platform for performing community-level physiological profiles (CLPP) using fluorescent-based detection of O-2 consumption by soil slurries within microtiter plates. Response of a spodic Florida soil to 3 organic fertilizer amendment treatments; (1) control with no organic amendment, (2) pelletized class A-A municipal biosolids amendment, and (3) fresh dairy waste solids amendment was measured in soils taken from a corn-rye crop rotation. The CLPP assay was used to assess endogenous and substrate induced (similar to 75 mu g C as acetate, casein, coumaric acid, mannose, or asparagine g(-1) soil) respiration, with and without assay N additions (8 mu g N-NH4 g(-1) soil). Endogenous and substrate-induced respiration were generally greater in the dairy waste-amended soils, as quantified by a reduced lag period and greater response peak. Stimulatory effects from biosolid-amended soils were less extensive and consistent. The degree of N limitation on microbial activity was determined by comparing the response peak with and without N amendment. This difference in response (N-diff) was greatest for all treatments during the rye exponential growth phase (prior to heading), when extractable soil NH4-N and NO3-N concentrations were lowest (i.e., < 10 mg kg(-1)). The dairy waste treated soils had greater Ndiff values during the rye crop as compared to the other treatments, particularly for endogenous respiration and mannose-induced respiration. N-diff was low in all treatments during the corn crop, where extractable soil NH4-N + NO3-N remained at or above 20 mg N kg(-1). Plant yield data coincided with our estimates of N-limited microbial activity, with less mid-season rye biomass under dairy waste and no yield response with corn. Overall, these data indicate that this new method allows for a rapid, ecologically relevant evaluation of organic amendment impacts on microbial soil respiration and thereby plant yield response. Further characterization and interpretation of the variation in microbial respiration among specific C substrates and the relative impact of N amendments (i.e., N-diff), will provide insight to C and N cycling in soils receiving organic N inputs. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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