Dynamics of soil biota at different depths under two contrasting tillage practices

2008 
Abstract One aim of conservation tillage is to preserve soil biological properties. This study was conducted to examine the effects of two contrasting tillage treatments on soil biota at different depths. We investigated the population dynamics and vertical distributions of microbes and several soil faunal groups for 2 years in field Andosols in northeastern Japan. The experimental plots were under no tillage (NT) or conventional tillage (CT, rotary tilled to 20 cm) management. In the 0–10-cm soil layer, bacterial and fungal substrate-induced respiration (SIR) and the population density of enchytraeids were higher under NT than under CT, but the population densities of protozoa, mites, and collembolans did not differ significantly. In contrast, at 10–20 cm, both SIR values were higher under CT, where larger populations of mites and collembolans were recorded. At both depths, nematodes were more abundant under CT. Thus, the effects of tillage on these soil organisms differed according to soil depth, and negative impacts of tillage were smaller in the deeper layer. Larger amounts of earthworm casts at the soil surface in NT plots showed a greater biomass of earthworms than in CT. To evaluate the activities of soil biota, we buried litterbags with three different mesh sizes at the two depths and examined the rate of decomposition. The daily decay constant of litter in the surface soil layer (1.5–8.5 cm) was greater under NT. We suppose that the activities of soil biota in this layer were stimulated under NT, and that especially microbes and enchytraeids, which were abundant at 0–10 cm, contributed greatly to the decomposition.
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