Urea fertilisation affected soil organic matter dynamics and microbial community structure in pasture soils of Southern Ecuador
2009
Hamer, Ute | Potthast, Karin | Makeschin, Franz
In the mountain rainforest region of the South Ecuadorian Andes natural forests have often been converted to pastures by slash-and-burn practice. With advanced pasture age the pasture grasses are increasingly replaced by the tropical bracken leading to the abandonment of the sites. To improve pasture productivity a fertilisation experiment with urea was established. The effects of urea on soil organic matter (SOM) mineralisation and microbial community structure in top soil (0-5cm depth) of an active and abandoned pasture site have been investigated in laboratory incubation experiments. Either ¹⁴C- or ¹⁵N-labelled urea (74mgurea-Nkg⁻¹ dwsoil) was added to track the fate of ¹⁴C into CO₂ or microbial biomass and that of ¹⁵N into the KCl-extractable NH₄-N or NO₃-N or microbial biomass pool. The soil microbial community structure was assessed using phospholipid fatty acid analysis (PLFA). In a second experiment two levels of ¹⁴C-labelled urea (74 and 110mgurea-Nkg⁻¹ dwsoil) were added to soil from 5 to 10cm depth of the respective sites. Urea fertilisation accelerated the mineralisation of SOC directly after addition up to 17% compared to the non-fertilised control after 14 days of incubation. The larger the amount of N potentially available per unit of microbial biomass N the larger was the positive priming effect. Since in average 80% of the urea-C had been mineralised already 1 day after amendment, the priming effect was strong enough to cause a net loss of soil C. Although the structure of the microbial community was significantly different between sites, urea fertilisation induced the same alteration in microbial community composition: towards a relative lower abundance of PLFA marker characteristic of Gram-positive bacteria and a higher one of those typical of Gram-negative bacteria and fungi. This change was positively correlated with the increase in NH₄, NO₃ and DON availability. In addition to the activation of different microbial groups the abolishment of energy limitation of the microbes seemed to be an important mechanism for the enhanced mineralisation of SOM.
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