Relationship between microbial biomass and extractable organic carbon content in volcanic and non-volcanic ash soil
Applied Soil Ecology Volume 17 Issue 2
Page 183-187
published_at 2001-06
Title
Relationship between microbial biomass and extractable organic carbon content in volcanic and non-volcanic ash soil
Creator Keywords
andosols
extractable soil organic C
soil microbial biomass
A significant portion of plant-available nutrients is derived from the transformations of soil organic matter through microbial biomass. Therefore, it is important to elucidate the factors determining the amount of soil microbial biomass. Using five volcanic ash and five non-volcanic ash soils from Japan, we investigated the relationships between the amount of microbial biomass and several fractions of soil organic C. A portion of each soil sample was amended with plant debris. After 3?6 months incubation, the microbial biomass C was measured by chloroform fumigation-extraction and soil organic C was extracted with 0.5 M K2SO4, 1 M KNO3, or cold water. When all soil samples were taken into consideration, microbial biomass C was correlated with the amount of 1 M KNO3- (r=0.577**) or cold water- (r=0.561**) extractable organic C. When the volcanic and non-volcanic ash soils were extracted with 0.5 M K2SO4, it was possible to discriminate between the organic C of the two groups of soils. The amounts of microbial biomass (r=0.683**) and 1 M KNO3-extractable organic C (r=0.863**) correlated well with hot water-extractable organic C. The results may indicate that the 1 M KNO3-extractable fraction is the major fraction of soil organic C that controls the amount of microbial biomass irrespective of the soil type.
Languages
eng
Resource Type
journal article
Publishers
Elsevier
Date Issued
2001-06
File Version
Not Applicable (or Unknown)
Access Rights
metadata only access
Relations
[ISSN]0929-1393
[NCID]AA11002364
[isPartOf]
[URI]http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/09291393
Schools
農学部