Phosphorus in the soil microbial biomass
Phosphorus in the soil microbial biomass (biomass P) and soil biomass carbon (biomass C) were linearly related in 15 soils (8 grassland, 6 arable, 1 deciduous woodland), with a mean P concentration of 3.3% in the soil biomass. The regression accounted for 82% of the variance in the data. The relatio...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Soil biology & biochemistry 1984, Vol.16 (2), p.169-175 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Phosphorus in the soil microbial biomass (biomass P) and soil biomass carbon (biomass C) were linearly related in 15 soils (8 grassland, 6 arable, 1 deciduous woodland), with a mean P concentration of 3.3% in the soil biomass. The regression accounted for 82% of the variance in the data. The relationship was less close than that previously measured between soil biomass C and soil ATP content and indicates that biomass P measurements can only provide a rough estimate of biomass C content. Neither P concentration in the soil biomass, nor the amount of biomass P in soil, were correlated with soil NaHCO
3-extractable inorganic, organic or total P.
The calculated mean annual flux of P through the biomass (in a soil depth of 10 cm) in 8 grassland soils was large, 23 kg P ha
−1 yr
−1, and more than three times the mean annual P flux through 6 arable soils (7 kg P ha
−1 yr
−1), suggesting that biomass P could make a significant contribution to plant P nutrition in grassland.
About 3% of the total soil organic P in the arable soils was in microbial biomass and from 5 to 24% in the grassland soils. The decline in biomass P when an old grassland soil was put into an arable rotation for about 20 yr was sufficient to account for about 50% of the decline in total soil organic P during this period. When an old arable soil reverted to woodland, soil organic P doubled in 100 yr; biomass P increased 11-fold during the same period. |
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ISSN: | 0038-0717 1879-3428 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0038-0717(84)90108-1 |