4.3 Article

Effect of soil moisture and bovine urine on microbial stress

Journal

PEDOBIOLOGIA
Volume 55, Issue 4, Pages 211-218

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.pedobi.2012.03.004

Keywords

Bovine urine; Microbial stress; Phospholipid fatty acid analysis; Soil moisture content; Urinary salt

Funding

  1. Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) of New Zealand
  2. Natural Environment Research Council [ceh010010] Funding Source: researchfish

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While many studies have examined the cycling of urinary nutrients, few have focused on the effects ruminant urine might have on the soil microbial community. Urine application can cause microbial communities to become stressed, potentially changing community composition and microbial function with subsequent effects on nutrient dynamics. Identification of the factors that stress microbes may assist in explaining ruminant urine effects on nutrient cycling. In this laboratory study bovine urine, with either a high (15.0 g K+ l(-1)) or low (10.4 g K+ l(-1)) salt concentration, was added to repacked soil cores maintained at high or low soil moisture contents (70 or 35% water-filled pore space, respectively). Control cores did not receive urine. Microbial stress was measured using phospholipicl fatty acid (PLEA) biomarker ratios. Urine addition increased stress as indicated by a decrease in the isol 5:0/anteisol 5:0 PLEA ratio from >1.35 to <0.95 in both wet and dry soils and by an increase in the 18:1 omega 9trans/18:1 omega 9cis PLEA ratio from 1.4 to 1.9 from day 8 onwards in wet soils. Higher stress was indicated by a lower Gram-positive/Gram-negative PLEA ratio in the urine treatments than in the control treatments on day 29 and this may have been a response to the reduction in substrate availability as the experiment progressed. The PLEA biomarkers showed that the salt treatments did not induce stress. Stress induced by urine addition and wet soil treatments was also indicated by principal component analyses and the metabolic quotient for CO2, respectively. Thus microbial stress was induced by both urine addition and high soil moisture content, but not specifically by increasing the urinary salt concentration. (C) 2012 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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