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Microbial enzyme activity and stoichiometry signal the effects of agricultural intervention on nutrient cycling in peatlands. / Qin, Lei; Freeman, Chris; Jia, Xueying et al.
Yn: Ecological Indicators, Cyfrol 122, 107242, 01.03.2021.

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Qin L, Freeman C, Jia X, Zhang Z, Liu B, Zhang S et al. Microbial enzyme activity and stoichiometry signal the effects of agricultural intervention on nutrient cycling in peatlands. Ecological Indicators. 2021 Maw 1;122:107242. Epub 2020 Rhag 22. doi: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2020.107242

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Microbial enzyme activity and stoichiometry signal the effects of agricultural intervention on nutrient cycling in peatlands

AU - Qin, Lei

AU - Freeman, Chris

AU - Jia, Xueying

AU - Zhang, Zhongsheng

AU - Liu, Bo

AU - Zhang, Shaoqing

AU - Jiang, Ming

PY - 2021/3/1

Y1 - 2021/3/1

N2 - Fertilization in agricultural peatlands accelerates nutrient cycling and creates a potential risk to nearby natural peatlands. Here, using undisturbed peatlands as reference, we studied soil carbon (C), nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and the key enzymes for nutrient cycling at 0-50 cm soil depth in agricultural, nearby disturbed peatlands in a temperate fen in Northeast China. Agricultural intervention significantly increased total P in agricultural and disturbed peatlands, and decreased soil organic carbon content and total N in surface soil of agricultural peatlands, however total N significantly accumulated at 20-30 cm soil both in agricultural and disturbed peatlands (p<0.05). Both N-acetyl-β-glucosaminidase and phosphatase significantly declined in agricultural peatlands, while only phosphatase decreased in disturbed peatlands (p<0.05), and linear regression models showed strong effects of changes of soil nutrient levels on enzyme activities. The ratios of β-D-glucosidase to N-acetyl-β-glucosaminidase and phosphatase markedly increased in agricultural peatlands and showed higher ratios in deeper soil of disturbed peatlands, suggesting relatively higher microbial demand for carbon. Nonmetric multidimensional scaling analysis showed that variations of enzyme activity and stoichiometry can be used to reveal agricultural disturbance, and further redundancy analysis identified that total P and SOC explained 38.3% and 8.3% of the variance. Overall, our findings show that microbial enzymatic activity and stoichiometry can be effective and sensitive indicators of agricultural intervention and nutrient changes in peatlands, which implies that they can be used in monitoring of future fertilization management strategies aimed at fostering more sustainable agriculture.

AB - Fertilization in agricultural peatlands accelerates nutrient cycling and creates a potential risk to nearby natural peatlands. Here, using undisturbed peatlands as reference, we studied soil carbon (C), nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and the key enzymes for nutrient cycling at 0-50 cm soil depth in agricultural, nearby disturbed peatlands in a temperate fen in Northeast China. Agricultural intervention significantly increased total P in agricultural and disturbed peatlands, and decreased soil organic carbon content and total N in surface soil of agricultural peatlands, however total N significantly accumulated at 20-30 cm soil both in agricultural and disturbed peatlands (p<0.05). Both N-acetyl-β-glucosaminidase and phosphatase significantly declined in agricultural peatlands, while only phosphatase decreased in disturbed peatlands (p<0.05), and linear regression models showed strong effects of changes of soil nutrient levels on enzyme activities. The ratios of β-D-glucosidase to N-acetyl-β-glucosaminidase and phosphatase markedly increased in agricultural peatlands and showed higher ratios in deeper soil of disturbed peatlands, suggesting relatively higher microbial demand for carbon. Nonmetric multidimensional scaling analysis showed that variations of enzyme activity and stoichiometry can be used to reveal agricultural disturbance, and further redundancy analysis identified that total P and SOC explained 38.3% and 8.3% of the variance. Overall, our findings show that microbial enzymatic activity and stoichiometry can be effective and sensitive indicators of agricultural intervention and nutrient changes in peatlands, which implies that they can be used in monitoring of future fertilization management strategies aimed at fostering more sustainable agriculture.

U2 - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2020.107242

DO - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2020.107242

M3 - Article

VL - 122

JO - Ecological Indicators

JF - Ecological Indicators

SN - 1470-160X

M1 - 107242

ER -