Bacterial and Fungal Cell-Wall Residues in Conventional and No-Tillage Agroecosystems

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autorschaft

Externe Organisationen

  • Universität Bayreuth
  • The Ohio State University
  • Colorado State University
Forschungs-netzwerk anzeigen

Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)1188-1198
Seitenumfang11
FachzeitschriftSoil Science Society of America Journal
Jahrgang63
Ausgabenummer5
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 1 Sept. 1999
Extern publiziertJa

Abstract

Agricultural management practices have been shown to influence the decomposer community in soils, with no-tillage (NT) systems favoring fungi as compared with conventional tillage (CT) systems. In this study, we examined six North American agroecosystems with respect to the effects of NT vs. CT management systems on the accrual of microbial cell-wall residues in surface soil. We used total amino sugar contents to estimate living and decomposing microbial cell-wall mass in soil and the contents of glucosamine and muramic acid to separate fungal and bacterial contributions to microbial-derived soil organic matter (SOM). Compared with estimates of glucosamine and muramic acid present in living biomass of fungi and bacteria, total concentrations of these compounds (745-2076 mg glucosamine kg-1 soil and 37-79 mg muramic acid kg-1 soil) were larger by factors of 54 to 745 and 26 to 82, respectively. At three sites, the ratios of glucosamine to muramic acid in NT soils (32.0, 30.0, 42.2) significantly exceeded those in the respective CT soils (18.8, 22.1, 23.0) because of a higher enrichment of glucosamine. This coincided with higher values for fungal biomass, particulate organic matter carbon (POM-C), mean weight diameter of water-stable aggregates (MWD), and total organic carbon (TOC). Analysis of aggregate-size classes showed that the additional glucosamine accumulated in >53-mm aggregates but not in smaller particles. The enrichment of SOM in fungal-derived glucosamine suggests that the accrual of hyphal cell-wall residues is an important process in the three NT agroecosystems which leads to higher SOM storage in surface soil concurrent with an increase in aggregate stability. The other soils, having a lower clay plus silt content, exhibited no significant differences in POM-C, MWD, and total amino sugars between NT and CT management systems. We suggest that at lower clay plus silt contents the beneficial potential for NT to sequester microbial-derived SOM is lower because of limited physical stabilization.

ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete

Ziele für nachhaltige Entwicklung

Zitieren

Bacterial and Fungal Cell-Wall Residues in Conventional and No-Tillage Agroecosystems. / Guggenberger, Georg; Frey, Serita D.; Six, Johan et al.
in: Soil Science Society of America Journal, Jahrgang 63, Nr. 5, 01.09.1999, S. 1188-1198.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Guggenberger G, Frey SD, Six J, Paustian K, Elliott ET. Bacterial and Fungal Cell-Wall Residues in Conventional and No-Tillage Agroecosystems. Soil Science Society of America Journal. 1999 Sep 1;63(5):1188-1198. doi: 10.2136/sssaj1999.6351188x
Download
@article{9f8607653f72493eb265c73998ae8b72,
title = "Bacterial and Fungal Cell-Wall Residues in Conventional and No-Tillage Agroecosystems",
abstract = "Agricultural management practices have been shown to influence the decomposer community in soils, with no-tillage (NT) systems favoring fungi as compared with conventional tillage (CT) systems. In this study, we examined six North American agroecosystems with respect to the effects of NT vs. CT management systems on the accrual of microbial cell-wall residues in surface soil. We used total amino sugar contents to estimate living and decomposing microbial cell-wall mass in soil and the contents of glucosamine and muramic acid to separate fungal and bacterial contributions to microbial-derived soil organic matter (SOM). Compared with estimates of glucosamine and muramic acid present in living biomass of fungi and bacteria, total concentrations of these compounds (745-2076 mg glucosamine kg-1 soil and 37-79 mg muramic acid kg-1 soil) were larger by factors of 54 to 745 and 26 to 82, respectively. At three sites, the ratios of glucosamine to muramic acid in NT soils (32.0, 30.0, 42.2) significantly exceeded those in the respective CT soils (18.8, 22.1, 23.0) because of a higher enrichment of glucosamine. This coincided with higher values for fungal biomass, particulate organic matter carbon (POM-C), mean weight diameter of water-stable aggregates (MWD), and total organic carbon (TOC). Analysis of aggregate-size classes showed that the additional glucosamine accumulated in >53-mm aggregates but not in smaller particles. The enrichment of SOM in fungal-derived glucosamine suggests that the accrual of hyphal cell-wall residues is an important process in the three NT agroecosystems which leads to higher SOM storage in surface soil concurrent with an increase in aggregate stability. The other soils, having a lower clay plus silt content, exhibited no significant differences in POM-C, MWD, and total amino sugars between NT and CT management systems. We suggest that at lower clay plus silt contents the beneficial potential for NT to sequester microbial-derived SOM is lower because of limited physical stabilization.",
author = "Georg Guggenberger and Frey, {Serita D.} and Johan Six and Keith Paustian and Elliott, {Edward T.}",
year = "1999",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.2136/sssaj1999.6351188x",
language = "English",
volume = "63",
pages = "1188--1198",
journal = "Soil Science Society of America Journal",
issn = "0361-5995",
publisher = "Soil Science Society of America",
number = "5",

}

Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Bacterial and Fungal Cell-Wall Residues in Conventional and No-Tillage Agroecosystems

AU - Guggenberger, Georg

AU - Frey, Serita D.

AU - Six, Johan

AU - Paustian, Keith

AU - Elliott, Edward T.

PY - 1999/9/1

Y1 - 1999/9/1

N2 - Agricultural management practices have been shown to influence the decomposer community in soils, with no-tillage (NT) systems favoring fungi as compared with conventional tillage (CT) systems. In this study, we examined six North American agroecosystems with respect to the effects of NT vs. CT management systems on the accrual of microbial cell-wall residues in surface soil. We used total amino sugar contents to estimate living and decomposing microbial cell-wall mass in soil and the contents of glucosamine and muramic acid to separate fungal and bacterial contributions to microbial-derived soil organic matter (SOM). Compared with estimates of glucosamine and muramic acid present in living biomass of fungi and bacteria, total concentrations of these compounds (745-2076 mg glucosamine kg-1 soil and 37-79 mg muramic acid kg-1 soil) were larger by factors of 54 to 745 and 26 to 82, respectively. At three sites, the ratios of glucosamine to muramic acid in NT soils (32.0, 30.0, 42.2) significantly exceeded those in the respective CT soils (18.8, 22.1, 23.0) because of a higher enrichment of glucosamine. This coincided with higher values for fungal biomass, particulate organic matter carbon (POM-C), mean weight diameter of water-stable aggregates (MWD), and total organic carbon (TOC). Analysis of aggregate-size classes showed that the additional glucosamine accumulated in >53-mm aggregates but not in smaller particles. The enrichment of SOM in fungal-derived glucosamine suggests that the accrual of hyphal cell-wall residues is an important process in the three NT agroecosystems which leads to higher SOM storage in surface soil concurrent with an increase in aggregate stability. The other soils, having a lower clay plus silt content, exhibited no significant differences in POM-C, MWD, and total amino sugars between NT and CT management systems. We suggest that at lower clay plus silt contents the beneficial potential for NT to sequester microbial-derived SOM is lower because of limited physical stabilization.

AB - Agricultural management practices have been shown to influence the decomposer community in soils, with no-tillage (NT) systems favoring fungi as compared with conventional tillage (CT) systems. In this study, we examined six North American agroecosystems with respect to the effects of NT vs. CT management systems on the accrual of microbial cell-wall residues in surface soil. We used total amino sugar contents to estimate living and decomposing microbial cell-wall mass in soil and the contents of glucosamine and muramic acid to separate fungal and bacterial contributions to microbial-derived soil organic matter (SOM). Compared with estimates of glucosamine and muramic acid present in living biomass of fungi and bacteria, total concentrations of these compounds (745-2076 mg glucosamine kg-1 soil and 37-79 mg muramic acid kg-1 soil) were larger by factors of 54 to 745 and 26 to 82, respectively. At three sites, the ratios of glucosamine to muramic acid in NT soils (32.0, 30.0, 42.2) significantly exceeded those in the respective CT soils (18.8, 22.1, 23.0) because of a higher enrichment of glucosamine. This coincided with higher values for fungal biomass, particulate organic matter carbon (POM-C), mean weight diameter of water-stable aggregates (MWD), and total organic carbon (TOC). Analysis of aggregate-size classes showed that the additional glucosamine accumulated in >53-mm aggregates but not in smaller particles. The enrichment of SOM in fungal-derived glucosamine suggests that the accrual of hyphal cell-wall residues is an important process in the three NT agroecosystems which leads to higher SOM storage in surface soil concurrent with an increase in aggregate stability. The other soils, having a lower clay plus silt content, exhibited no significant differences in POM-C, MWD, and total amino sugars between NT and CT management systems. We suggest that at lower clay plus silt contents the beneficial potential for NT to sequester microbial-derived SOM is lower because of limited physical stabilization.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0032730510&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.2136/sssaj1999.6351188x

DO - 10.2136/sssaj1999.6351188x

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:0032730510

VL - 63

SP - 1188

EP - 1198

JO - Soil Science Society of America Journal

JF - Soil Science Society of America Journal

SN - 0361-5995

IS - 5

ER -

Von denselben Autoren