Effects of fertilizer application and fire regime on soil microbial biomass carbon and nitrogen, and nitrogen mineralization in an Australian subalpine eucalypt forest
1995
Hossain, A.K.M.A. | Raison, R.J. | Khanna, P.K.
The effects of a range of fertilizer applications and of repeated low-intensity prescribed fires on microbial biomass C and N, and in situ N mineralization were studied in an acid soil under subalpine Eucalyptus pauciflora forest near Canberra, Australia. Fertilizer treatments (N, P, N + P, lime + P, sucrose + P), and P in particular, tended to lower biomass N. The fertilizer effects were greatest in spring and smaller in summer and late autumn. Low-intensity prescribed fire lowered biomass N at a soil depth of 0-5 cm with the effect being greater in the most frequently burnt soils. No interactions between fire treatments, season, and depth were significant. Only the lime + P and N + P treatments significantly affected soil microbial biomass C contents. The N + P treatment increased biomass C only at 0-2.5 cm in depth, but the soil depth of entire 0-10 cm had much higher (> doubled) biomass C values in the lime + P treatment. Frequent (two or three times a year) burning reduced microbial biomass C, but the reverse was true in soils under forest burn at intervals of 7 years. Soil N mineralization was increased by the addition of N and P (alone or in combination), lime + P, and sucrose + P to the soil. The same was true for the ratio of N mineralization to biomass N. Soil N mineralization was retarded by repeated fire treatments, especially the more frequent fire treatment where rates were only about half those measured in unburnt soils. There was no relationship between microbial biomass N (kg N ha-1) and the field rates of soil N mineralization (kg N ha-1 month-1) The results suggest that although soil microbial biomass N represents a distinct pool of N, it is not a useful measure of N turnover.
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