Publication detail
Practical applications of thermogravimetry in soil science: Part 5. Linking the microbial soil characteristics of grassland and arable soils to thermogravimetry data
DOLEŽALOVÁ WEISSMANNOVÁ, H. MALÝ, S. BRTNICKÝ, M. DEMYAN, M. SIEWERT, C. TOKARSKI, D. KAMENÍKOVÁ, E. KUČERÍK, J. HOLÁTKO, J.
Original Title
Practical applications of thermogravimetry in soil science: Part 5. Linking the microbial soil characteristics of grassland and arable soils to thermogravimetry data
Type
journal article in Web of Science
Language
English
Original Abstract
Thermogravimetry (TG) is a simple method that enables rapid analysis of soil properties such as content of total organic C, nitrogen, clay and C fractions with different stability. However, the possible link between TG data and microbiological soil properties has not been systematically tested yet, which limits TG application for soil and soil organic matter assessment. This work aimed to search and to validate relationships of thermal mass losses (TML) to total C and N contents, microbial biomass C and N, basal and substrate-induced respiration, extractable organic carbon content, anaerobic ammonification, urease activity, short-term nitrification activity, specific growth rate and time to reach the maximum respiration rate for two sample sets of arable and grassland soils. Analyses of the training soil set revealed significant correlations of TML with basic soil properties such as carbon and nitrogen content with distinguishing linear regression parameters and temperatures of correlating mass losses for arable and grassland soils. In a second stage, the equations of significant correlations were used for validation with an independent second sample set. This confirmed applicability of developed equations for prediction of microbiological properties mainly for arable soils. For grassland soils was the applicability lower, which was explained as the influence of rhizosphere processes. Nevertheless, the application of TG can facilitate the understanding of changes in soil caused by microorganism's activity, and the different regression equations between TG and soil parameters reflect changes in proportions between soil components caused by land-use management.
Keywords
Thermogravimetry; Soil microbiological characteristics; Arable; Grassland; Correlation
Authors
DOLEŽALOVÁ WEISSMANNOVÁ, H.; MALÝ, S.; BRTNICKÝ, M.; DEMYAN, M.; SIEWERT, C.; TOKARSKI, D.; KAMENÍKOVÁ, E.; KUČERÍK, J.; HOLÁTKO, J.
Released
2. 2. 2023
Publisher
SPRINGER
Location
DORDRECHT
ISBN
1388-6150
Periodical
Journal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry
Year of study
148
Number
4
State
Hungary
Pages from
23
Pages to
46
Pages count
13
URL
BibTex
@article{BUT182488,
author="Helena {Doležalová Weissmannová} and Stanislav {Malý} and Martin {Brtnický} and Jiří {Holátko} and Michael S. {Demyan} and Christian {Siewert} and David {Tokarski} and Eliška {Kameníková} and Jiří {Kučerík}",
title="Practical applications of thermogravimetry in soil science: Part 5. Linking the microbial soil characteristics of grassland and arable soils to thermogravimetry data",
journal="Journal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry",
year="2023",
volume="148",
number="4",
pages="23--46",
doi="10.1007/s10973-022-11709-6",
issn="1388-6150",
url="https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10973-022-11709-6#Ack1"
}