Register      Login
Soil Research Soil Research Society
Soil, land care and environmental research
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Influence of soil moisture regime on the respiration response of soils subjected to osmotic stress

GP Sparling, AW West and J Reynolds

Australian Journal of Soil Research 27(1) 161 - 168
Published: 1989

Abstract

The influence of the soil moisture regime on the tolerance of the soil micro-organisms to increased osmotic stress was examined by laboratory tests with a range of New Zealand soils. Soils from various climatic regions (moist, intermediate and dry) were amended with glucose-NaCl solutions, incubated for 0.5 h, and the respiration rate over the following 2 h was used as a measure of the response of the microbial biomass to the changed osmotic potential. Osmotic potentials were varied between -4 and -80 bar by altering the concentration of NaCl. Air-drying the soils at 25°C decreased the respiration response of the microbial biomass by 3-60% but had little effect on the tolerance of the surviving populations to decreased osmotic potentials. In general, the soils showed the same patterns: an osmotic potential of -23 bar decreased the respiration response by 28-45% (18-44% after air-drying) and a -80 bar potential decreased it by 64-86% (52-84% after air-drying). For the majority of soils, a consistent relationship was obtained between the respiration rate of the moist soils and the osmotic potential applied. A reasonable prediction of the respiration response after air-drying could be obtained from the respiration response of moist soils at -25 bar osmotic potential.

https://doi.org/10.1071/SR9890161

© CSIRO 1989

Committee on Publication Ethics


Export Citation Get Permission

View Dimensions