A spatially intensive sampling of surface soil layers (81 stratified-randomized sampling points across a 14 km2study area) was performed in a high-mountain grassland landscape (Central Apennines, Italy) in July 2017, inorder to describe the heterogeneity of microbial habitats and measure their microbial enzymatic activity. Threedifferent microbial habitat types were identified via Hierarchical Cluster Analysis on the basis of 14 (measured orremote-sensed) environmental variables (including chemical and physical soil properties, topographic andgeomorphological features and vegetation cover): (i) sub-acidic, at high elevation, with high vegetation cover (ofmostly acidophytic/mesophytic species) and high silt content, and the lowest clay content; (ii) sub-acidic, at lowelevation, with a high vegetation cover and a very low stone cover, with the highest sand and the lowest siltcontent, and the highest available phosphorus; (iii) very shallow soil, mainly stone-covered, at high elevation,with the highest pH values, on steep slopes, with the highest content of organic matter and the highest waterholding capacity. The third habitat showed the highest enzymatic activity (b-glucosidase, ?-cellobiohydrolaseand leucine-arylamidase) involved in C and N cycling, while the more acidic and deeper soils, typical of sinkholeor slope areas, favoured the acid phosphomonoesterase activity involved in P cycle thanks to the establishment ofthe rhizospheric activity of the herbaceous plant species. Moreover, we analysed the relative importance ofenvironmental variables on the total enzyme activities via Boosted Regression Trees (BRT): the results highlighted- for the first time as far as we know - the importance of topographic factors such as slope inclination inpredicting the microbial functional capacity in a mountain grassland ecosystem. We conclude that the differentenzymatic activity patterns found in the three habitats suggest diverse microbial functions with respect tonutrient cycling, within a small landscape and a relatively homogeneous land-cover.

Microbial activity and habitat heterogeneity in surface soil in a high-mountain grassland landscape (Central Apennines, Italy)

Luisa Massaccesi;
2023

Abstract

A spatially intensive sampling of surface soil layers (81 stratified-randomized sampling points across a 14 km2study area) was performed in a high-mountain grassland landscape (Central Apennines, Italy) in July 2017, inorder to describe the heterogeneity of microbial habitats and measure their microbial enzymatic activity. Threedifferent microbial habitat types were identified via Hierarchical Cluster Analysis on the basis of 14 (measured orremote-sensed) environmental variables (including chemical and physical soil properties, topographic andgeomorphological features and vegetation cover): (i) sub-acidic, at high elevation, with high vegetation cover (ofmostly acidophytic/mesophytic species) and high silt content, and the lowest clay content; (ii) sub-acidic, at lowelevation, with a high vegetation cover and a very low stone cover, with the highest sand and the lowest siltcontent, and the highest available phosphorus; (iii) very shallow soil, mainly stone-covered, at high elevation,with the highest pH values, on steep slopes, with the highest content of organic matter and the highest waterholding capacity. The third habitat showed the highest enzymatic activity (b-glucosidase, ?-cellobiohydrolaseand leucine-arylamidase) involved in C and N cycling, while the more acidic and deeper soils, typical of sinkholeor slope areas, favoured the acid phosphomonoesterase activity involved in P cycle thanks to the establishment ofthe rhizospheric activity of the herbaceous plant species. Moreover, we analysed the relative importance ofenvironmental variables on the total enzyme activities via Boosted Regression Trees (BRT): the results highlighted- for the first time as far as we know - the importance of topographic factors such as slope inclination inpredicting the microbial functional capacity in a mountain grassland ecosystem. We conclude that the differentenzymatic activity patterns found in the three habitats suggest diverse microbial functions with respect tonutrient cycling, within a small landscape and a relatively homogeneous land-cover.
2023
Istituto per i Sistemi Agricoli e Forestali del Mediterraneo - ISAFOM
Nutrient cycling Microbial biomass Biochemical activity Soil functions Boosted Regression Trees analysis
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
prod_488282-doc_203077.pdf

accesso aperto

Descrizione: Microbial activity and habitat heterogeneity in surface soil in a high-mountain grassland landscape (Central Apennines, Italy)
Tipologia: Versione Editoriale (PDF)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 3.37 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
3.37 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/439626
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 2
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact