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RESEARCH PRODUCT
A microcosm study on the respiration and weight loss in birch litter and raw humus as influenced by soil fauna
Veikko HuhtaHeikki SetäläJari Haimisubject
chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyFaunaSoil biologySoil ScienceEnchytraeidaePlant litterbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyHumusAnimal sciencechemistryBotanyLitterOrganic matterMicrocosmAgronomy and Crop Sciencedescription
The effect of diverse soil fauna (Collembola, Acari, Enchytraeidae, Nematoda) on decomposition of dead organic matter was studied in microcosms containing (1) birch leaf litter, (2) raw humus of coniferous forest and (3) litter on humus. Total respiration (CO2 evolution) was monitored weekly, and mass loss, length of fungal hyphae (total and metabolically active) and survival of animal populations were checked at the end of weeks 12 and 21–22 from the start of experiment. Animal populations established themselves well during the incubation. At the end of the experiment some replicates containing litter had microarthropod densities of up to 500 specimens per microcosm, corresponding to a field population of 200 000 m−2. The soil animals had a positive influence on total respiration in all substrates. By the end of experiment 32.0%, 22.6% and 14.6% more CO2 had evolved in the presence of animals in litter, litter + humus and humus alone, respectively. There was clear trend towards a higher mass loss in the presence of animals, though it was significant in litter only. Our results showed that a diverse soil animal community enhances the activity of soil microbes, and may thereby accelerate decomposition in raw coniferous forest soil.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1988-01-01 | Biology and Fertility of Soils |