Welcome to Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology! Today is Share:

Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2010, Vol. 21 ›› Issue (10): 2593-2598.

• Articles • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Amino sugars mineralization and its responses to exogenous substances in black soil of Northeast China.

ZHANG Wei1, HE Hong-bo1, XIE Hong-tu1, BAI Zhen1, ZHANG Xu-dong1,2   

  1. 1Key Laboratory of Terrestrial Ecological Process, Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyang 110016, China|2National Field Research Station of Shenyang Agroecosystems, Shenyang 110016, China
  • Online:2010-10-18 Published:2010-10-18

Abstract: By the method of intermittent leaching aerobic incubation, this paper studied the mineralization of three kinds of microbes-derived amino sugar (glucosamine, muramic acid, and galactosamine) in black soil of Northeast China, and the responses to glucose addition and glucose plus nitrogen amendment. The mineralization of the amino sugars was compound-specific. During incubation period, the content of muramic acid decreased by 25.4%, while that of glucosamine decreased by 7.1%, suggesting that bacteria-derived muramic acid was more inclined to be mineralized, compared with fungi-originated glucosamine. However, the mineralized amount of glucosamine (68.4 mg·kg-1) was greater than that of muramic acid (15.4 mg·kg-1). Both glucose addition and glucose plus nitrogen amendment improved the contents of glucosamine and muramicacid significantly, but the effect varied. The mineralization of galactosamine was much slower, and less affected by exogenous substances addition, indicating that galactosamine was more stable in test soil.

Key words: amino sugar, mineralization, glucose, nitrogen supply, black soil, water-nitrogen interaction, microjet irrigation, water use efficiency, nitrogen use efficiency, gravel-mulched field.