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Radiocesium storage in soil microbial biomass of undisturbed alpine meadow soils and its relation to 137Cs soil-plant transfer
Authors:Stemmer Michael  Hromatka Angelika  Lettner Herbert  Strebl Friederike
Institution:Institute of Soil Research, University of Agricultural Sciences, Gregor-Mendel-Strasse 33, 1180 Vienna, Austria. michael.stemmer@boku.ac.at
Abstract:This study focuses on radiocesium storage in soil microbial biomass of undisturbed alpine meadow sites and its relation to the soil-to-plant transfer. Soil and plant samples were taken in August 1999 from an altitude transect (800-1600m.a.s.l.) at Gastein valley, Austria. Soil samples were subdivided into 3-cm layers for analyses of total, K(2)SO(4)-extractable and microbially stored (137)Cs. Microbial biomass was measured by the fumigation extraction method, and fungal biomass was quantified using ergosterol as biomarker molecule. In general, the quantity of (137)Cs stored in the living soil microbial biomass was relatively small. At the high-altitude meadows, showing high amounts of fungal biomass, microbially stored (137)Cs amounted to 0.64+/-0.14kBqm(-2) which corresponds to about 1.2-2.7% of the total (137)Cs soil inventory. At lower altitudes, microbial (137)Cs content was distinctly smaller and in most cases not measurable at all using the fumigation extraction method. However, a positive correlation between the observed soil-to-plant aggregated transfer factor, microbially stored (137)Cs and fungal biomass was found, which indicates a possible role of fungal biomass in the storage and turnover of (137)Cs in soils and in the (137)Cs uptake by plants.
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