Microbial growth responses upon rewetting soil dried for four days or one year

Annelein Meisner, Erland Bååth, Johannes Rousk*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

141 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

A pulse of respiration is induced by rewetting dry soil. Here we study the microbial responses underlying this pulse of respiration when rewetting soil dried for 4-days or 1-year. In the 4-days dried soil, respiration increased to a maximum rate immediately upon rewetting after which it decreased exponentially. In the 1-year dried soil, respiration also increased immediately, but then remained high for 16h, after which it increased further, exponentially, with a peak rate after 20h. The level of bacterial growth was initially lower in rewetted than in constantly moist soil, but started to increase linearly immediately upon rewetting 4-days dried soil. In 1-year dried soil, bacterial growth started only after a 16h lag period of zero growth, and then increased exponentially to a peak after 30h, at rates superseding those in continually moist soil. Fungal growth started to increase immediately upon rewetting, and reached the rate of the control soil after 2 days for the 4-days dried soil, and after a week for the 1-year dried soil. Thus, prolonged drying altered the pattern of bacterial and fungal growth after rewetting. Our results suggest that both fungal and bacterial growth are uncoupled from the initial respiration pulse and that growth responses and microbial C-use efficiency can be affected by prolonged drying.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)188-192
Number of pages5
JournalSoil Biology and Biochemistry
Volume66
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bacterial growth
  • C-use efficiency
  • Drought
  • Drying-rewetting
  • Fungal growth
  • Microbial growth efficiency
  • Mineralization
  • Respiration

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