4.7 Article

High specific activity in low microbial biomass soils across a no-till evapotranspiration gradient in Colorado

Journal

SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 43, Issue 1, Pages 97-105

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2010.09.018

Keywords

Basal respiration; Microbial community structure; Maintenance requirement; N mineralization; Soil enzyme activities; Substrate-induced respiration (SIR)

Categories

Funding

  1. Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station
  2. Council for International Exchange of Scholars

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The need to identify microbial community parameters that predict microbial activity is becoming more urgent, due to the desire to manage microbial communities for ecosystem services as well as the desire to incorporate microbial community parameters within ecosystem models. In dryland agroecosystems, microbial biomass C (MBC) can be increased by adopting alternative management strategies that increase crop residue retention, nutrient reserves, improve soil structure and result in greater water retention. Changes in MBC could subsequently affect microbial activities related to decomposition. C stabilization and sequestration. We hypothesized that MBC and potential microbial activities that broadly relate to decomposition (basal and substrate-induced respiration, N mineralization, and beta-glucosidase and arylsulfatase enzyme activities) would be similarly affected by no-till, dryland winter wheat rotations distributed along a potential evapotranspiration (PET) gradient in eastern Colorado. Microbial biomass was smaller in March 2004 than in November 2003 (417 vs. 231 mu g g(-1) soil), and consistently smaller in soils from the high PET soil (191 mu g g(-1)) than in the medium and low PET soils (379 and 398 mu g g(-1), respectively). Among treatments, MBC was largest under perennial grass (398 mu g g(-1)). Potential microbial activities did not consistently follow the same trends as MBC, and the only activities significantly correlated with MBC were beta-glucosidase (r = 0.61) and substrate-induced respiration (r = 0.27). In contrast to MBC, specific microbial activities (expressed on a per MBC basis) were greatest in the high PET soils. Specific but not total activities were correlated with microbial community structure, which was determined in a previous study. High specific activity in low biomass, high PET soils may be due to higher microbial maintenance requirements, as well as to the unique microbial community structure (lower bacterial-to-fungal fatty acid ratio and lower 17:0 cy-to-16:1 omega 7c stress ratio) associated with these soils. In conclusion, microbial biomass should not be utilized as the sole predictor of microbial activity when comparing soils with different community structures and levels of physiological stress, due to the influence of these factors on specific activity. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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