Short-Term Effect of Nitrogen Intensification on Aggregate Size Distribution, Microbial Biomass and Enzyme Activities in a Semi-Arid Soil Under Different Crop Types
Autor: | V.R. Ramakrishna Parama, Rajasekaran Murugan, R. Muthuraju, Bernard Ludwig, Beate Madan |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Soil test
Urease biology Bulk soil food and beverages Soil Science chemistry.chemical_element Biomass 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences 010501 environmental sciences complex mixtures 01 natural sciences Nitrogen Arid Crop Agronomy chemistry Soil water 040103 agronomy & agriculture biology.protein 0401 agriculture forestry and fisheries 0105 earth and related environmental sciences |
Zdroj: | Pedosphere. 29:483-491 |
ISSN: | 1002-0160 |
Popis: | There is a lack of quantitative assessments available on the effect of agricultural intensification on soil aggregate distribution and microbial properties. Here, we investigated how short-term nitrogen (N) intensification induced changes in aggregate size distribution and microbial properties in a soil of a hot moist semi-arid region (Bangalore, India). We hypothesised that N intensification would increase the accumulation of macroaggregates > 2 mm and soil microbial biomass and activity, and that the specific crop plant sowed would influence the level of this increase. In November 2016, surface (0–10 cm) and subsurface (10–20 cm) soil samples were taken from three N fertilisation treatments, low N (50 kg N ha−1), medium N (75 and 100 kg N ha−1 for finger millet and maize, respectively), and high N (100 and 150 kg N ha−1 for finger millet and maize, respectively). Distribution of water-stable aggregate concentrations, carbon (C) and N dynamics within aggregate size class, and soil microbial biomass and activity were evaluated. The high-N treatment significantly increased the concentration of large macroaggregates in the subsurface soil of the maize crop treatment, presumably due to an increased C input from root growth. Different N fertilisation levels did not significantly affect C and N concentrations in different aggregate size classes or the bulk soil. High-N applications significantly increased dehydrogenase activity in both the surface soil and the subsurface soil and urease activity in the surface soil, likely because of increased accumulation of enzymes stabilised by soil colloids in dry soils. Dehydrogenase activity was significantly affected by the type of crop, but urease activity not. Overall, our results showed that high N application rates alter large macroaggregates and enzyme activities in surface and subsurface soils through an increased aboveground and corresponding belowground biomass input in the maize crop. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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