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Changes in heated and autoclaved forest soils of S.E. Australia. I. Carbon and nitrogen

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Abstract

The effect of heating and autoclaving on extractable nitrogen, N mineralisation and C metabolism was studied by heating five forest soils in the laboratory, simulating the range of effects of heat due to bushfire. Top soil (0–5 cm) was heated to 60 °C, 120 °C and 250 °C for 30 minutes; unheated soil was taken as a control. Samples of the soil heated to 250 °C were also inoculated with fresh soil to accelerate the recovery of the microbial population. Soil autoclaving was carried out as another heat treatment (moist heat). Soils were analysed immediately after heating and 3 times during seven months of incubation to assess immediate and longer-term effects of heating.

Extractable N (organic and mineral forms) increased after heating to 120 °C, but decreased with further heating to 250 °C suggesting the volatilisation of N. N associated with microbial biomass diminished with heating and was barely detectable after the 250 °C treatment. Microbial biomass was an important source of soluble N in heated soils, and only partly recovered during subsequent long incubation. The amount of N mineralised during incubation depended on both soil and temperature. Nitrification did not occur when soils were heated to 250 °C (with or without inoculum), or after autoclaving, demonstrating the high sensitivity of nitrifiers to heat. At the beginning of soil incubation, respiration was enhanced in heated soils (250 °C, 250 °C inoculated) and autoclaved soils, but after 30 days of incubation respiration decreased to values either similar to or lower than those in control. This respiration pattern indicated that a fraction of labile C was released by heating, which was quickly mineralised within 30 days of incubation. These results demonstrate some effects of soil heating on C and N dynamics in forest soils.

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Serrasolsas, I., Khanna, P.K. Changes in heated and autoclaved forest soils of S.E. Australia. I. Carbon and nitrogen. Biogeochemistry 29, 3–24 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00002591

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