Effects of successive soil freeze-thaw cycles on soil microbial biomass and organic matter decomposition potential of soils

被引:120
作者
Yanai, Y [1 ]
Toyota, K [1 ]
Okazaki, M [1 ]
机构
[1] Tokyo Univ Agr & Technol, Dept Environm Symbiot Prod Syst, Grad Sch Bioapplicat & Syst Engn, Koganei, Tokyo 1848588, Japan
关键词
chitin decomposition; partial sterilization; pore size distribution; rice straw decomposition; soil freeze-thaw cycles;
D O I
10.1080/00380768.2004.10408542
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Effects of soil freeze-thaw cycles on soil microbial biomass were examined using 8 soil samples collected from various locations, including 4 arable land sites and 2 forest sites in temperate regions and 2 arable land sites in tropical regions. The amounts of soil microbial biomass C and N, determined by the chloroform fumigation and extraction method, significantly decreased by 6 to 40% following four successive soil freeze-thaw cycles (-13 and 4degreesC at 12 h-intervals) compared with the unfrozen control (kept at 4degreesC during the same period of time as that of the freeze-thaw cycles). In other words, it was suggested that 60 to 94% of the soil microorganisms might survive following the successive freeze-thaw cycles. Canonical correlation analysis revealed a significantly positive correlation between the rate of microbial survival and organic matter content of soil (r = 0.948*). Correlation analysis showed that the microbial survival rate was also positively correlated with the pore-space whose size ranged from 9.5 to 6.0 mum (capillary-equivalent-diameter; r = 0.995**), pH(KCI) values (r = 0.925**), EC values (r = 0.855*), and pH(H2O) values (r = 0.778*), respectively. These results suggested that the soil physicochemical properties regulating the amount of unfrozen water in soil may affect the rate of microbial survival following the soil freeze-thaw cycles. The potential of organic matter decomposition of the soils was examined to estimate the effects of the soil freeze-thaw cycles on the soil processes associated with the soil microbial communities. The soil freeze-thaw cycles led to significant 6% increase in chitin decomposition and 7% decrease in rice straw decomposition (P < 0.05), suggesting that the partial sterilization associated with the soil freeze-thaw cycles might disturb the soil microbial functions.
引用
收藏
页码:821 / 829
页数:9
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