No evidence that conifer biochar impacts soil functioning by serving as microbial refugia in boreal soils
It is well established that application of biochar to soils can promote soil fertility, which ultimately may enhance plant growth. While many mechanisms have been proposed to explain this, one specific mechanism, the “microbial refugia hypothesis” suggests that biochar may provide physical protectio...
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Zusammenfassung: | It is well established that application of biochar to soils can promote
soil fertility, which ultimately may enhance plant growth. While many
mechanisms have been proposed to explain this, one specific mechanism, the
“microbial refugia hypothesis” suggests that biochar may provide physical
protection for soil microbe from soil micro-fauna that otherwise exert
top-down control on microbial biomass and activity. We tested the
microbial refugia hypothesis by incubating two boreal soils with and
without biochar derived from a wood mixture of boreal tree species (Picea
abies and Pinus sylvestris), and with and without soil nematodes. We
measured phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) as a relative measure of
microbial biomass, and several variables indicative of microbial activity,
including extractable nutrient concentrations (NH4+, NO3-, and PO4-),
heterotrophic N2-fixation, and soil respiration. Contrary to our
expectations, we found that biochar by itself did not stimulate microbial
biomass or activity. Further, we found that nematode addition to soil
stimulated rather than depressed the biomass of several bacterial PLFA
groups. Finally, interactive effects between the nematode treatment and
biochar never worked in a way that supported the microbial refugia
hypothesis. Our findings suggests that a typical boreal biochar applied to
boreal soils may not have the same stimulatory effect on microbial biomass
and activity that has been shown in some other ecosystems, and that
enhanced plant growth in response to biochar addition sometimes observed
in boreal environments is likely due to other mechanisms, such as direct
nutrient supply from biochar, or amelioration of soil pH. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.g79cnp5s3 |