Organic Residues and Their Effect on Selected General of Autotrophic and Heterotrophic Soil Bacteria
- Authors
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A.A. Azzouz
Soil and Water Department, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Tripoli, Tripoli, LibyaAuthor -
S. O. Hraib
Soil and Water Department, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Tripoli, Tripoli, LibyaAuthor
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- Keywords:
- Organic residues, Bacria, Autotrophic, Heterotrophic
- Abstract
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The population of total soil bacteria increased in response to added organic amendments. Results obtained reflect the impact of C:N ratio of the residue on the degree of its influence. An/hun- dred-fold increase in total soil bacteria after one week of observed incubation in samples received wheat-straw or dry- manure. Alfalfameal amended samples showed a mush higher values and reached ten thousands-fold after two weeks of incubation. The heterotrophic, non-symbiotic ni- trogen-fixing bacterium of the genus Azotobacter responded effeciently to wheat-straw. An increase in their num bers by ten-thousands-fold was observed throughtout the incubation period. No response was detected with alfalfa-meal or dry-manure except after four days of incubation where the numbers increased by a hundred-fold, afterwhich a draw- back to the original values was seen. This could be due to the inhibition ac- tion of mineralized nitrogen (ammonium + nitrite + nitrate) which reached val- ues in excess of 200ppm in alfalfa-meal amended samples and by the antagones- tic effect of protein-decomposing bacte- ria that proliferate successfully in sam- ples recieved drymanure. The autotrophic nitrifiers (Nitrosomonas, Nitrobacter), behaved just-like the total soil bacteria in re- sponse to all organic amendments. The numbers increaed by ten-fold in wheat- straw or drymanure amended samples and reached a hundred-fold in al-falfa- meal treatment.
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- Published
- 1992-06-30
- Issue
- Vol. 1 No. 1 (1992)
- Section
- Articles
- License
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