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Soil resource availability impacts microbial response to organic carbon and inorganic nitrogen inputs
Authors:ZHANG Wei-jian  W ZHU and S HU
Institution:1. Department of Agronomy, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China;Department of Plant Pathology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27605, USA
2. Department of Biological Sciences, State University of New York-Binghamton, Binghamton, NY 13902, USA
3. Department of Plant Pathology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27605, USA
Abstract:Impacts of newly added organic carbon(C) and inorganic nitrogen(N) on the microbial utilization of soil organic matter are important in determining the future C balance of terrestrial ecosystems. We examined microbial responses to cellulose and ammonium nitrate additions in three soils with very different C and N availability. These soils included an organic soil(14.2% total organic C, with extremely high extractable N and low labile C), a forest soil(4.7% total organic C, with high labile C and extremely low extractable N), and a grassland soil(1.6% total organic C, with low extractable N and labile C). While cellulose addition alone significantly enhanced microbial respiration and biomass C and N in the organic and grassland soils, it accelerated only the microbial respiration in the highly-N limited forest soil. These results indicated that when N was not limited, C addition enhanced soil respiration by stimulating both microbial growth and their metabolic activity. New C inputs lead to elevated C release in all three soils, and the magnitude of the enhancement was higher in the organic and grassland soils than the forest soil. The addition of cellulose plus N to the forest and grassland soils initially increased the microbial biomass and respiration rates, but decreased the rates as time progressed. Compared to cellulose addition alone, cellulose plus N additions increased the total C-released in the grassland soil, but not in the forest soil. The enhancement of total C-released induced by C and N addition was less than 50% of the added-C in the forest soil after 96 d of incubation, in contrast to 87.5% and 89.0% in the organic and grassland soils. These results indicate that indigenous soil C and N availability substantially impacts the allocation of organic C for microbial biomass growth and/or respiration, potentially regulating the turnover rates of the new organic C inputs.
Keywords:cellulose  inorganic nitrogen  microbial biomass  microbial activity  carbon sequestration
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