摘要

Soil faunal activity stimulates terrestrial carbon and nutrient cycling and maintains soil physical structure. Interestingly, the effects of faunal activity on soil microbial community composition and activity is less clear, although the microbial community evidently is the key element of terrestrial decomposition processes and nutrient cycling. We manipulated the composition of soil fauna in mesh bags with various mesh sizes (5, 45, and 1,000 A mu m) to exclude faunal groups based on body size. Our experiment indicated that feeding and foraging activity of nematodes and enchytraeids modified the physical-chemical properties of the soil and had long-term effects on soil bacterial community composition (measured by denaturing gel electrophoresis, colony-forming unit counts, and phospholipid fatty acid pattern). However, microbial enzyme (phosphomonoesterase, butyrate-esterase, -glucosidase, N-acetyl-glucosamidase, and -cellobiosidase) activities (measured by fluorogenic model substrates), decomposition rate of woody and cellulose material, or C and N status of the soil were not altered by the faunal treatment. Instead, enzyme activity was reduced by soil drying. Our results give support to ideas that functional redundancy is a common characteristic of the soil organisms, but no support was found for the idea that the community composition of soil decomposers had a strong link to the regulation of C and N cycles in the soil.

  • 出版日期2010-2