Microbial biomass in a soil amended with different types of organic wastes.

Waste Manag Res

Institut National de Recherche Scientifique et Technique, BP 95, 2050 Hammam Lif, Tunisia.

Published: April 2004

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how different types of organic wastes, like composts and manure, impact the microbial biomass in a loamy-clayey soil over an 8-week incubation period.
  • Results show that the amount of microbial biomass carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) depends on the type of organic waste used, its stability, and chemical composition.
  • Generally, organic amendments increase microbial biomass-C but it declines over time, especially with immature compost, and shows specific correlations with various soil characteristics like organic C content and nitrogen ratios.

Article Abstract

Application of different types of organic wastes may have a marked effect on soil microbial biomass and its activity. The objective of this study was to quantify the amount of microbial biomass in a loamy-clayey soil, amended with different types of organic waste residues (composts of municipal solid waste of different ages, sewage sludge and farmyard manure) and incubated for 8 weeks at 25 degrees C and two-thirds of field capacity, using the fumigation-extraction method. Both microbial biomass-C and -N (BC and BN, respectively) appeared to be dependent on the type of organic waste residues, on their degree of stability, and on their chemical characteristics. In general, organic wastes increased the microbial biomass-C content in the soil and the microbial BC was positively correlated with the organic C content, the C/N, neutral detergent fibre/N (NDF/N) and acid detergent fibre/N (ADF/ N) ratios. The microbial biomass content decreased according to the period of incubation, especially when the compost used was immature. The microbial biomass-N was positively correlated with the total N and percentage of hemicellulose. The microbial biomass-C was linearly related with the microbial biomass-N and the ratio BC/BN was exponentially related with the BC.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0734242X04043930DOI Listing

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