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SOIL MICROBES AND THE NITROGEN CYCLE Topics covered 1. General nitrogen cycle 2. Nitrogen mineralization and immobilization 3. Nitrification 4. Nitrogen fixation 5. Denitrification. Reading: Killham - p. 108-141, 182-186 Articles
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SOIL MICROBES AND THE NITROGEN CYCLE Topics covered 1. General nitrogen cycle 2. Nitrogen mineralization and immobilization 3. Nitrification 4. Nitrogen fixation 5. Denitrification
Reading: Killham - p. 108-141, 182-186 Articles Aber, J., W. McDowell, K. Nadelhoffer, A. Magill, G. Bernston, M. Kamaka, S. McNulty, W. Currie, L. Rustad and I. Fernandez. 1998. Nitrogen saturation in temperate forest ecosystems: hypotheses revisited. BioScience 48:921-934. Hart, S. E., G. E. Nason, D. D. Myrold and D. A. Perry. 1994. Dynamics of gross nitrogen transformations in an old-growth forest: the carbon connection. Ecology 74:880-891. Neff, J. C., F. S. Chapin III, and P. M. Vitousek. 2003. Breaks in the cycle: dissolved organic nitrogen in terrestrial ecosystems. Front Ecol. Environ. 1(4): 205-211. Articles referenced in notes Aber, J. D. and J. M. Melillo. 1994. Litter decomposition: measuring relative contributions to organic matter and nitrogen to forest soils. Can. J. Bot. 589:416-421. McClaugherty, C. A., J. Pastor and J. D. Aber. 1985. Forest litter decomposition in relation to soil nitrogen dynamics and litter quality. Ecology 66:266-275. 2
2.0 Nitrogen Mineralization and Immobilization 2.1 Forms of N in litter and humus Amino acids (20-50% of humus N) Amino sugars Proteins Nucleic acids (cytosine) Urea N bound in soil complexed w polyphenolics in clay Structures from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ 9
2.0 Nitrogen Mineralization and Immobilization (cont’d) 2.2 Mineralization of N Organic N to NH4 (and NO3 also is considered) Accumulated NH4 represents quantity of substrate N in excess of microbial demand Net change of inorganic N = organic N mineralized – (N assimilated by microbes + plant uptake + N leached + N denitrified) 2.3 N mineralization can be aerobic or anaerobic Aerobic: protein → CO2, NH4, SO4, and H2O Anaerobic: protein → amines, NH4, organic acids, CO2, mercaptans, and H2S (putrefaction) 10
2.0 Nitrogen Mineralization and Immobilization (cont’d) • 2.4 Methods for determining available N • useful for predicting correct fertilizer additions • Incubation method of soil • aerobic - cores (w/wo resins) or bags in field or lab • anaerobic - generally lab w/ saturated soil & controlled temp • Resin bags in soil - cation &/or anion resins • Extraction of N • 2 M KCl extraction of soil (mineral &/or organic) • Microbial biomass N 11
2.0 Nitrogen Mineralization and Immobilization (cont’d) • 2.5 Environmental influences of N mineralization e.g., • Nitrogen – high soil N results in high N mineralization (1 – 4 % of humus N mineralized per year) • Moisture – optimum 50-75% of moisture holding capacity • (e.g., 20-30% in loam soil) • pH – greater N mineralization in neutral than acid soil • Temperature – optimum 30-60 C • Cultivation causes large decline in soil organic N content 12
2.6 Net N mineralization rates in forests (29-125 kg/ha/yr in Wisconsin). In sugar maple and aspen much of this nitrified, but there is very little nitrification in white oak and hemlock stands. McClaugherty et al. 1985 13
2.7 N immobilization – results from microbial assimilation of inorganic N. Critical substrate C:N ratios for immobilization are<20:1 = mineralization; >30:1 = immobilization (Fig 1) 14
Edmonds 17
2.9 N mineralization by earthworms – up to 72% of the dry weight of earthworms is protein and that 1.75% of the freshweight is N. In a Fraxinus/Quercus woodland with 364 g m-2 of earthworms, annual N return from worms dying in this population is 6-7 g m-2 (60-70 kg/ha/yr). About 25% of the nitrogen from decomposing worms is nitrate, 45% is ammonia and the remainder as soluble organic matter in components such as setae and cuticle. Mineralizable N is also produced by living earthworms in their excreta and earthworm casts generally contain more N than the surrounding soil. 19