4.7 Article

Effects of drying-rewetting frequency on soil carbon and nitrogen transformations

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SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY
卷 34, 期 6, 页码 777-787

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0038-0717(02)00007-X

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drying-rewetting; stress; respiration; nitrifiers; soil carbon

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Soil drying and rewetting impose a significant stress on the soil microbial community. While wetting events are common in most environments, the short and long-term effects of soil rewetting on microbial processes have not been well studied. Furthermore, it is not clear if stress history is important to consider when modeling microbial controls on ecosystem dynamics. In this experiment, we manipulated the frequency of soil rewetting events during 2 months to determine how stress history influences the response of soil microbial communities to rewetting events. Two soils were collected from the Sedgwick Ranch Natural Reserve in Santa Ynez, CA, one from an annual grassland, the other from underneath an oak canopy. Soils were incubated in the lab and went through either 0, 1, 2, 4, 6, 9, or 15 drying-rewetting cycles over 2 months. Soil moisture content was adjusted so that the average moisture content over the course of the incubation was the same for all samples, compensating for the number of drying-rewetting cycles. Soils were analyzed for respiration rate, substrate utilization efficiency, nitrification potential, microbial biomass, and NH4+ and NO3- concentrations. Total CO2 loss during incubation significantly increased with number of rewetting events for oak soils but not for grass soils, where a large number of rewetting events decreased total CO2 loss. Exposure to frequent drying-rewetting events decreased the amount Of CO2 released upon rewetting and dramatically increased the activity of autotrophic nitrifier populations. For up to 6 weeks after the last drying-rewetting cycle, respiration rates in soils exposed to a history of drying-rewetting events were substantially lower than their non-stressed controls. In all cases, the effects of the rewetting stress were greater in oak than in grass soils. The results indicate that drying-rewetting events can induce significant changes in microbial C and N dynamics and these effects can last for more than a month after the last stress. The frequency of drying-rewetting stress events has important ecosystem-level ramifications and should be incorporated into models of soil microbial dynamics. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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