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Taylor and Francis Group, Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis, 4(41), p. 408-423, 2010

DOI: 10.1080/00103620903494368

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Substrate‐Induced Respiration of a Sandy Soil Treated with Different Types of Organic Waste

Journal article published in 2010 by S. Mattana, O. Ortiz, J. M. Alcañiz ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

A sandy soil was amended with different types of sewage sludge (digested, dried, and composted) and pig slurry. The composted sludges displayed higher organic‐matter stability (39–45%) than only digested sludge (26–39%) or digested + dried sludge (23–32%). The microbial biomass of the dried sludge was undetectable. Digested and composted sludges and pig slurry displayed microbial biomasses (12492–13887 µg g−1, 1221–2050 µg g−1, and 5511 µg g−1, respectively) greater than the soil (108 µg g−1). The wastes were applied at seven doses, ranging from 10 to 900 g kg−1. Soils were incubated for 28 days. Substrate‐induced respiration (SIR) was measured for 12 consecutive hours on day 1 and on day 28. The results showed that SIR increased with the dose of organic amendment. However, SIR decreased when moderate doses of pig slurry or high doses of digested + dried sludge were tested. The possibility of using this inhibition as an ecotoxicological indicator is discussed.