Monday, 7 November 2005
10

Carbon Additions and Nitrogen Cycling in Soil: How Do the Influences of Glucose, Starch and Lignin Differ?.

Jennifer N. Bennett and H. Lee Allen. North Carolina State University, Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources, 3107 Jordan Hall, Raleigh, NC 27695-8008

Availability of carbon (C) often limits microbial activity in soil. Thus when C is added to soil, microbial activity usually increases and this rise coincides with a decrease in extractable mineral nitrogen (N). With increased activity, there is a greater microbial demand for mineral N. However, in theory, not all C forms should illicit the same microbial response. Molecules such as glucose are easily metabolized by most all microbes, while larger compounds such as lignin, can only be degraded by a subset of microbes with the necessary enzymatic capacity. Thus the additions of glucose versus lignin should not only cause differences in soil microbial activity but in mineral N immobilization as well. Nitrogen immobilization by microbes should be greater following the addition of glucose than the addition of lignin.

Glucose, soluble starch and lignin were added in solution to A-horizon soils collected from adjacent fertilized and unfertilized loblolly pine (Pinus taeda) plantations. During a 4-week period, the soils were routinely measured to determine mineral N (NO3- and NH4+), dissolved organic N (DON) and C (DOC) and microbial N and C. Only glucose caused a net immobilization of N (NO3-, NH4+ and DON) over the 4-week period. Total extractable N was greatest in the control (water additions), starch and lignin treated soils. There were no consistent trends in microbial biomass N during the experiment, but microbial biomass N in the fertilized soils was always higher than in the unfertilized soils. In the fertilized soils microbial biomass C increased in response to all the C additions, but decreased following C additions to the unfertilized soil. Therefore, although soil N in response to the small (glucose) and large (lignin) molecular weight C compounds support the hypothesized high C - low N response, the trends measured in the microbial biomass are not easily explained.


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