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Title

Gross nitrification rates in four Japanese forest soils: heterotrophic versus autotrophic and the regulation factors for the nitrification.

Authors

Kuroiwa, Megumi; Koba, Keisuke; Isobe, Kazuo; Tateno, Ryunosuke; Nakanishi, Asami; Inagaki, Yoshiyuki; Toda, Hiroto; Otsuka, Shigeto; Senoo, Keishi; Suwa, Yuichi; Yoh, Muneoki; Urakawa, Rieko; Shibata, Hideaki

Abstract

Measurements of gross NH and NO production in forest soils were conducted using the N pool dilution method. Mineral topsoils (0-10 cm depth) were collected from four forests from northern to southern Japan with a natural climate gradient to elucidate the mechanisms regulating gross nitrification rates in forest soils. Additionally, we attempted to evaluate the relative importance of heterotrophic nitrification in gross total nitrification using acetylene as a specific inhibitor of autotrophic nitrification. Distinct differences were found among sites in the gross rates of NH production (3.1-11.4 mg N kg day) and gross total nitrification (0.0-6.1 mg N kg day). The rates of gross heterotrophic nitrification were low in this study, indicating that heterotrophic nitrification is of minor importance in most forest mineral topsoils in Japan. Significant relations were found between gross autotrophic nitrification and gross NH production, soil N, and soil C concentrations, but none was found between gross autotrophic nitrification and soil pH. We determined the critical value of the gross NH production rates for gross autotrophic nitrification under which no gross autotrophic nitrification occurred, as well as the critical soil C/N ratio above which gross autotrophic nitrification ceased. Results show that tight coupling of production and consumption of NH prevents autotrophic nitrifiers from utilizing NH as long as NH availability is low.

Subjects

JAPAN; NITRIFICATION; SOIL mineralogy; FOREST soils; NITROGEN in soils; HETEROTROPHIC bacteria; AUTOTROPHIC bacteria; ACETYLENE

Publication

Journal of Forest Research, 2011, Vol 16, Issue 5, p363

ISSN

1341-6979

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1007/s10310-011-0287-0

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