Microbial Degradation of Plant Residues Rapidly Causes Long-Lasting Hypoxia in Soil upon Irrigation and Affects Leaching of Nitrogen and Metals
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Published:2023-06-20
Issue:2
Volume:7
Page:62
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ISSN:2571-8789
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Container-title:Soil Systems
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Soil Systems
Author:
Siedt Martin12ORCID, Teggers Eva-Maria12, Linnemann Volker3, Schäffer Andreas2ORCID, van Dongen Joost T.1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Molecular Ecology of the Rhizosphere, RWTH Aachen University, Worringerweg 1, 52074 Aachen, Germany 2. Institute for Environmental Research, RWTH Aachen University, Worringerweg 1, 52074 Aachen, Germany 3. Institute of Environmental Engineering, RWTH Aachen University, Krefelder Str. 299, 52070 Aachen, Germany
Abstract
With this study, we aim to relate the substrate quality of different organic materials derived from plant residues to the respiratory activity of soil microorganisms after amendment, the formation of oxygen gradients upon irrigation, and the leaching of macronutrients and metals in soil. Elemental analyses were performed to determine the chemical composition of wheat straw, green compost, and a biochar product, showing that carbon availability, C/N ratio, and metal contents varied markedly. Consequently, after application to well-aerated sandy loam soil at 1% w/w, only straw increased microbial activity substantially, and nitrate was depleted within one week. Upon intense irrigation of soil columns packed with differently amended soils, strong hypoxia formed only in straw–soil, where microbial oxygen demand for straw degradation was high. This was enhanced after the application of mineral fertilizers, and nitrate leaching was mitigated. With the decreasing redox potential in straw–soil, the leaching of Fe, Mn, Al, Ni, Co, and As was increased. However, nitrate from mineral fertilizer mitigated the reduction of redox potential and, thus, the leaching of these metals. Measuring oxygen at different depths revealed near anoxic conditions at −15 cm of straw–soil with NP-fertilizer applied within 12 h after the start of irrigation and remained for at least 60 h, while oxygen showed extensive fluctuations in the upper few centimeters. This study showed that organic soil amendments with high carbon availability induce microbial respiration to the extent that causes strong and long-lasting hypoxia upon irrigation, even in sandy soil, which leads to substantial effects on the mobility of nutrients and toxic metals. In contrast, organic soil amendments with low carbon availability did not cause such effects.
Funder
Federal Agency for Nature Conservation Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science
Reference49 articles.
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