학술논문

Immobilization and mineralization of nitrogen in a saline and alkaline soil during microbial use of sugarcane filter cake amended with glucose
Document Type
Report
Source
Biology and Fertility of Soils. Feb, 2009, Vol. 45 Issue 3, p289, 8 p.
Subject
Cake -- Analysis
Plant lipids -- Analysis
Phytosterols -- Analysis
Soil biology -- Analysis
Dextrose -- Analysis
Glucose -- Analysis
Soils -- Carbon content
Soils -- Analysis
Language
English
ISSN
0178-2762
Abstract
A 42-day incubation was conducted to study the effect of glucose and ammonium addition adjusted to a C/N ratio of 12.5 on sugarcane filter cake decomposition and on the release of inorganic N from microbial residues formed initially. The CO.sub.2 evolved increased in comparison with the non-amended control from 35% of the added C with pure +5 mg g.sup.-1 soil filter cake amendment to 41% with +5 mg g.sup.-1 soil filter cake +2.5 mg g.sup.-1 soil glucose amendment to 48% with 5 mg g.sup.-1 soil filter cake +5 mg g.sup.-1 soil glucose amendment. The different amendments increased microbial biomass C and microbial biomass N within 6 h and such an increase persisted. The fungal cell-membrane component ergosterol initially showed a disproportionate increase in relation to microbial biomass C, which completely disappeared by the end of the incubation. The cellulase activity showed a 5-fold increase after filter cake addition, which was not further increased by the additional glucose amendment. The cellulase activity showed an exponential decline to values around 4% of the initial value in all treatments. The amount of inorganic N immobilized from day 0 to day 14 increased with increasing amount of C added, in contrast to the control treatment. After day 14, the immobilized N was re-mineralized at rates between 1.3 and 1.5 Aug N g.sup.-1 soil d.sup.-1 in the treatments being more than twice as high as in the control treatment. This means that the re-mineralization rate is independent of the actual size of the microbial residues pool and also independent of the size of the soil microbial biomass.