首页> 外文期刊>Biology and fertility of soils: Cooperating Journal of the International Society of Soil Science >Soil compaction and forest floor removal reduced microbial biomass and enzyme activities in a boreal aspen forest soil.
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Soil compaction and forest floor removal reduced microbial biomass and enzyme activities in a boreal aspen forest soil.

机译:土壤压实和去除森林地面减少了北方白杨林土壤微生物的生物量和酶活性。

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Soil enzymes are linked to microbial functions and nutrient cycling in forest ecosystems and are considered sensitive to soil disturbances. We investigated the effects of severe soil compaction and whole-tree harvesting plus forest floor removal (referred to as FFR below, compared with stem-only harvesting) on available N, microbial biomass C (MBC), microbial biomass N (MBN), and microbial biomass P (MBP), and dehydrogenase, protease, and phosphatase activities in the forest floor and 0-10 cm mineral soil in a boreal aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) forest soil near Dawson Creek, British Columbia, Canada. In the forest floor, no soil compaction effects were observed for any of the soil microbial or enzyme activity parameters measured. In the mineral soil, compaction reduced available N, MBP, and acid phosphatase by 53, 47, and 48%, respectively, when forest floor was intact, and protease and alkaline phosphatase activities by 28 and 27%, respectively, regardless of FFR. Forest floor removal reduced available P, MBC, MBN, and protease and alkaline phosphatase activities by 38, 46, 49, 25, and 45%, respectively, regardless of soil compaction, and available N, MBP, and acid phosphatase activity by 52, 50, and 39%, respectively, in the noncompacted soil. Neither soil compaction nor FFR affected dehydrogenase activities. Reductions in microbial biomass and protease and phosphatase activities after compaction and FFR likely led to the reduced N and P availabilities in the soil. Our results indicate that microbial biomass and enzyme activities were sensitive to soil compaction and FFR and that such disturbances had negative consequences for forest soil N and P cycling and fertility.
机译:土壤酶与森林生态系统中的微生物功能和养分循环有关,被认为对土壤干扰敏感。我们调查了严重的土壤压实和整棵树采伐加上林地清除(以下简称为FFR,与仅茎秆采伐相比)对可利用氮,微生物量C(MBC),微生物量N(MBN)和加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省道森克里克(Dawson Creek)附近的北方白杨(Populus tremuloides Michx。)北方森林的森林地面和0-10 cm矿质土壤中的微生物生物量P(MBP)以及脱氢酶,蛋白酶和磷酸酶活性。在林地中,对于所测量的任何土壤微生物或酶活性参数,均未观察到土壤压实效果。在林地完好无损的情况下,压实会使土壤中的有效氮,MBP和酸性磷酸酶分别降低53%,47%和48%,而蛋白酶和碱性磷酸酶的活性分别降低28%和27%,而与FFR无关。不考虑土壤压实,清除森林地面可利用的P,MBC,MBN,蛋白酶和碱性磷酸酶活性分别降低38%,46%,49%,25%和45%,有效氮,MBP和酸性磷酸酶活性降低52%,在非压实土壤中分别为50%和39%。土壤压实和FFR均不影响脱氢酶活性。压实和FFR后微生物生物量以及蛋白酶和磷酸酶活性的降低可能导致土壤中氮和磷的利用率降低。我们的结果表明,微生物的生物量和酶活性对土壤紧实度和FFR敏感,并且这种干扰对森林土壤的氮,磷循环和肥力具有负面影响。

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