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Catabolic response and phospholipid fatty acid profiles as microbial tools to assess soil functioning
Author(s) -
Romaniuk R.,
Costantini A.,
Giuffré L.,
Nannipieri P.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
soil use and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.709
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1475-2743
pISSN - 0266-0032
DOI - 10.1111/sum.12293
Subject(s) - microbial population biology , soil water , species evenness , agronomy , soil test , environmental science , chemistry , biology , ecology , species diversity , bacteria , genetics
Abstract Microbial properties may help to provide an integrated view of changes in soil functioning associated with soil management or soil status. The fatty acid profiles of membrane phospholipids ( PLFA ) can give the composition of ecophysiological groups of soil microbial communities, while catabolic response profiles ( CRP ) estimate the heterotrophic functional diversity in soils, both relevant to the understanding of the role of micro‐organisms in the functioning of the soil. The objectives of this study were (i) to evaluate the CRP and PLFA as microbial tools to characterize changes in soil functioning and (ii) clarify the relation among these microbial measurements, with other physical, chemical and biochemical soil properties. We compare the same soil subjected to different managements and degrees of erosion. An undisturbed soil ( UN ), an old pasture soil ( OP ) and soils under continuous cultivation ( NT ) with four different depth of A horizon: 25 cm ( NT 25), 23 cm ( NT 23), 19 cm ( NT 19) and 14 cm ( NT 14) were tested. Substrate‐induced respiration of most substrates diminished when cropping pressure increased ( UN  >  OP  >  NT ), and soil catabolic evenness, as a diversity index, decreased by increasing production pressure and soil erosion. The correlation found among most of the measured physical, chemical and biochemical soil properties with the catabolic evenness showed the potential of this measurement to provide an integrated view of soil functioning. The PLFA analysis showed that the composition of microbial community denoting a partial recovery after 10 yr under grazed grassland. The stress indicators showed that farming practices increased microbial stress with the highest values found in the most eroded soils.

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