Comparative Toxicities of Salts on Microbial Processes in Soil

Author:

Rath Kristin M.12,Maheshwari Arpita1,Bengtson Per1,Rousk Johannes1

Affiliation:

1. Section of Microbial Ecology, Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden

2. Centre for Environmental and Climate Research (CEC), Lund University, Lund, Sweden

Abstract

ABSTRACT Soil salinization is a growing threat to global agriculture and carbon sequestration, but to date it remains unclear how microbial processes will respond. We studied the acute response to salt exposure of a range of anabolic and catabolic microbial processes, including bacterial (leucine incorporation) and fungal (acetate incorporation into ergosterol) growth rates, respiration, and gross N mineralization and nitrification rates. To distinguish effects of specific ions from those of overall ionic strength, we compared the addition of four salts frequently associated with soil salinization (NaCl, KCl, Na 2 SO 4 , and K 2 SO 4 ) to a nonsaline soil. To compare the tolerance of different microbial processes to salt and to interrelate the toxicity of different salts, concentration-response relationships were established. Growth-based measurements revealed that fungi were more resistant to salt exposure than bacteria. Effects by salt on C and N mineralization were indistinguishable, and in contrast to previous studies, nitrification was not found to be more sensitive to salt exposure than other microbial processes. The ion-specific toxicity of certain salts could be observed only for respiration, which was less inhibited by salts containing SO 4 2− than Cl salts, in contrast to the microbial growth assessments. This suggested that the inhibition of microbial growth was explained solely by total ionic strength, while ion-specific toxicity also should be considered for effects on microbial decomposition. This difference resulted in an apparent reduction of microbial growth efficiency in response to exposure to SO 4 2− salts but not to Cl salts; no evidence was found to distinguish K + and Na + salts.

Funder

Vetenskapsrådet

Kungliga Fysiografiska Sällskapet i Lund

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference58 articles.

1. World salinization with emphasis on Australia

2. Martinez-Beltran J, Manzur CL. 2005. Overview of salinity problems in the world and FAO strategies to address the problem, p 311–314. In Proceedings of the International Salinity Forum, Riverside, CA.

3. Szabolcs I. 1989. Salt-affected soils. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL.

4. Bacterial and Fungal Contributions to Carbon Sequestration in Agroecosystems

5. Environmental and stoichiometric controls on microbial carbon‐use efficiency in soils

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