CSIRO Publishing Books Journals About Us Shopping Cart You are here: Journals > Soil Research   
Soil Research
  Soil, Land Care & Environmental Research
 
Search
 
 
  Advanced Search
   

Journal Home
About the Journal
Editorial Board
Contacts
For Advertisers
Content
Online Early
Current Issue
Just Accepted
All Issues
Special Issues
Sample Issue
For Authors
General Information
Notice to Authors
Submit Article
Open Access
For Referees
General Information
Review Article
Annual Referee Index
For Subscribers
Subscription Prices
Customer Service
Print Publication Dates

 e-Alerts
Subscribe to our Email Alert or RSS feeds for the latest journal papers.

 Connect with us
facebook   youtube

 

Article     |     Next >>   Contents Vol 37(4)

A sampling strategy to assess the effects of land use on microbial functional diversity in soils

Bradley P. Degens and Maja Vojvodi´c-Vukovi´c

Australian Journal of Soil Research 37(4) 593 - 602

Abstract

A suitable sampling strategy is necessary for broad-scale investigations of the effects of land use on microbial functional diversity in soils. We report on the development of procedures for sampling and handling field soils for assessment of heterotrophic functional diversity [by analysis of catabolic response profiles (CRPs)]. Individual CRPs were subject to factor analysis and the results were used for statistical comparisons of the soils. Transect sampling comparing CRPs in forest with pasture showed that most variation was attributable to differences between land uses, followed by field replication and laboratory replication. Differences in CRPs between pasture compared with pine forest, horticultural cropping, or maize cropping could also be determined by a similar sampling strategy. Variation in CRPs between land uses by using these sampling approaches was greater than variation within land uses. CRPs varied little between seasons in 2 land uses and samples could also be stored up to 5 months at 5°C with little change in CRPs. We recommend that microbial functional diversity (CRPs) can be assessed in different land uses without laboratory replication and that transect sampling strategies are suitable for distinguishing clear differences between land uses.

Keywords: catabolic response profiles, microbial catabolic diversity, field variability.



Full text doi:10.1071/SR98091

© CSIRO 1999

 
PDF (173 KB) $25
 Export Citation
 Print
  
  
Subscriber Login
Username:
Password:  

    


 
Top  Email this page
 
Legal & Privacy | Contact Us | Help

CSIRO

© CSIRO 1996-2012