Pot and adsorpt ion- exchange experiments were carried out by collecting the soil samples from the surfacelayer (0~15 cm) of red soil at the Ecological Experiment Station of Red Soil, the Chinese Academy of Sciences,i...Pot and adsorpt ion- exchange experiments were carried out by collecting the soil samples from the surfacelayer (0~15 cm) of red soil at the Ecological Experiment Station of Red Soil, the Chinese Academy of Sciences,in Jiangxi Province of China. When concentration of the exogenous La3+ exceeded 400 mg kg-1, therewas less non-exchangeable La3+ than exchangeable La3+ in the soil. Cation exchange capacity of the soilchanged slightly with increasing concentration of the exogenous La3+ in both experiments. However, in theadsorption-exchange experiment, when concentration of the exogenous La3+ was higher than 3Oo mg kg-1 ,exchangeable basic cations decreased significantly, while exchangeable hydrogen and exchangeable aluminumincreased significantly compared with the control treatments. The amounts of base cations (Ca2+ ) Mg2+, K+and Na+) exchanged by La3+ in the supernatant solution increased with the concentration of the exogenousLa3+, especially when concentration of the exogenous La3+ was higher than 50 mg kg-1.展开更多
The effects of slope aspects on soil biogeochemical properties and plant communities in forested environments have been studied extensively; however, slope aspect influence on soil microbial communities remains largel...The effects of slope aspects on soil biogeochemical properties and plant communities in forested environments have been studied extensively; however, slope aspect influence on soil microbial communities remains largely unexamined, despite the central role of soil biota in ecosystem functioning. In this study, the communities of both soil bacteria and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) were investigated using tagged pyrosequencing for three types of slope aspects (south-facing aspect, north-facing aspect and flat area) in a boreal forest of the Greater Khingan Mountains, China. The bacterial and AMF community composition differed with slope aspects. Bacterial diversity was the lowest on the north-facing aspect, and AMF diversity was the lowest on the flat area. Aspects also had a significant impact on soil pH and available phosphorus (P) and shrubby biomass. Soil pH and understory shrub biomass were significantly correlated with bacterial communities, and soil available P and shrub biomass showed significant correlations with AMF communities. Our results suggested that slope aspects affected bacterial and AMF communities, mediated by aspect-induced changes in plant community and soil chemical properties (e.g., pH and available P), which improved the knowledge on the effects of forest slope aspects on aboveground and belowground communities.展开更多
文摘Pot and adsorpt ion- exchange experiments were carried out by collecting the soil samples from the surfacelayer (0~15 cm) of red soil at the Ecological Experiment Station of Red Soil, the Chinese Academy of Sciences,in Jiangxi Province of China. When concentration of the exogenous La3+ exceeded 400 mg kg-1, therewas less non-exchangeable La3+ than exchangeable La3+ in the soil. Cation exchange capacity of the soilchanged slightly with increasing concentration of the exogenous La3+ in both experiments. However, in theadsorption-exchange experiment, when concentration of the exogenous La3+ was higher than 3Oo mg kg-1 ,exchangeable basic cations decreased significantly, while exchangeable hydrogen and exchangeable aluminumincreased significantly compared with the control treatments. The amounts of base cations (Ca2+ ) Mg2+, K+and Na+) exchanged by La3+ in the supernatant solution increased with the concentration of the exogenousLa3+, especially when concentration of the exogenous La3+ was higher than 50 mg kg-1.
基金We thank Ms. LIU Weili, Dr. CAI Wenhua, Mr. LIU Bo, and Dr. FANG Lei from the Institute of Ap- plied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences for assis- tance in sampling and Dr. XIONG Jingbo from the Ningbo University of China for assistance in bioinfor- matic analysis. This research was supported by the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Aca- demy of Sciences (No. XDB15010101), the National Basic Research Program (973 Program) of China (No. 2014CB954002), and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 41371254).
文摘The effects of slope aspects on soil biogeochemical properties and plant communities in forested environments have been studied extensively; however, slope aspect influence on soil microbial communities remains largely unexamined, despite the central role of soil biota in ecosystem functioning. In this study, the communities of both soil bacteria and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) were investigated using tagged pyrosequencing for three types of slope aspects (south-facing aspect, north-facing aspect and flat area) in a boreal forest of the Greater Khingan Mountains, China. The bacterial and AMF community composition differed with slope aspects. Bacterial diversity was the lowest on the north-facing aspect, and AMF diversity was the lowest on the flat area. Aspects also had a significant impact on soil pH and available phosphorus (P) and shrubby biomass. Soil pH and understory shrub biomass were significantly correlated with bacterial communities, and soil available P and shrub biomass showed significant correlations with AMF communities. Our results suggested that slope aspects affected bacterial and AMF communities, mediated by aspect-induced changes in plant community and soil chemical properties (e.g., pH and available P), which improved the knowledge on the effects of forest slope aspects on aboveground and belowground communities.