Yacouba Zi, Quang Van Pham, Nicolas Bottinelli, Yvan Capowiez, Amélie Cantarel, Cornelia Rumpel, Alessandro Florio
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
We investigated the potential of earthworm casts to emit N2O, hypothesizing that emission levels are influenced by the species of earthworm and their ecological category. This study examined casts a broad taxonomic and ecological coverage of tropical earthworms, i.e., 16 different species across four ecological categories. We quantified the potential nitrification, N2O production and consumption as well as the abundance of N-related microbial functional groups, including ammonia-oxidizers, nitrite-reducers, and distinct clades of N2O-reducers, along with casts chemical properties to determine cast organic matter quality and substrate availability. Earthworm casts exhibited significantly higher concentrations of carbon, nitrogen, and nitrate compared to control soil, while humification index were lower. A negative correlation between humification index and potential N₂O production suggests that more labile substrates in the casts promote higher N₂O flux. Net potential N₂O emissions were higher in the casts of 7 out of 16 species compared to control soil, and all species’ casts showed higher gross potential N₂O production, with substantial interspecific variability. The abundance of nitrite and N₂O reducers was significantly higher in the casts and positively correlated with potential N₂O emissions. Casts from epigeic and mixed categories displayed higher carbon and nitrogen content, abundance of nitrite and N₂O reducers, ammonia-oxidizing bacteria, and potential N₂O production compared to anecic and endogeic categories, which exhibited higher values of humification index. Structural equation modeling indicated that gross potential N₂O production was primarily explained by the abundance of nitrite reducers and substrate availability indicators such as humification index and nitrate concentration. Our study demonstrates significant interspecific variability in N₂O potential emissions from a broad range of tropical earthworm casts, influenced by species feeding behavior, microbial communities, and substrate availability.
期刊介绍:
Biology and Fertility of Soils publishes in English original papers, reviews and short communications on all fundamental and applied aspects of biology – microflora and microfauna - and fertility of soils. It offers a forum for research aimed at broadening the understanding of biological functions, processes and interactions in soils, particularly concerning the increasing demands of agriculture, deforestation and industrialization. The journal includes articles on techniques and methods that evaluate processes, biogeochemical interactions and ecological stresses, and sometimes presents special issues on relevant topics.