Citation Information

  • Title : Litter fingerprint on microbial biomass, activity, and community structure in the underlying soil
  • Source : Plain and Soil
  • Publisher : SPRINGER
  • Volume : 379
  • Issue : 1-2
  • Pages : 79-91
  • Year : 2014
  • DOI : 10.1007/s11104-014-2051-7
  • ISBN : 0032-079X
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Fanin,Nicolas
    • Haettenschwiler,Stephan
    • Fromin,Nathalie
  • Climates: Tropical rainforest (Af).
  • Cropping Systems:
  • Countries:

Summary

Little is known about how plant leaf litter decomposing on the soil surface is affecting microbial communities in the underlying soil. Here we examined the effects of decomposing leaf litter of different initial chemistry on biomass, stoichiometry, community structure and activity of microorganisms in the soil underneath the decaying litter layer. Leaf litter from six different neotropical tree species with contrasted quality decomposed on top of a common tropical soil in a laboratory microcosm experiment over 98 days. At the end of the experiment we determined microbial biomass C, N, and P, microbial community structure (PLFA), and community level physiological profiles (CLPP) from the top soil. Despite growing in a common soil substrate, soil microorganisms were strongly affected by litter species, especially by the soluble litter fraction. While litters with low soluble C content did not affect the soil microbial community, litters with high soluble C content led to an increase of microbial biomass and to a structural shift to relatively more Gram-negative bacteria. Changing community structure resulted in changes of catabolic capacity of microorganisms to metabolize a range of different C substrates. The large differences in leachate N and P among litter species, in contrast, had no effect on soil microbial parameters. Our data suggest that plant litter decomposing on the soil surface exhibit a strong and predictable leachate C-control over microbial community biomass, structure and function in the underlying soil.

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