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Springer, Biology and Fertility of Soils, 1(44), p. 59-68, 2007

DOI: 10.1007/s00374-007-0178-x

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Properties of anaerobically digested and composted municipal solid waste assessed by linking soil mesofauna dynamics and nitrogen modelling

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This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

We have studied the effect of anaerobically digested ( ADMSW) and composted municipal solid waste ( CMSW) on mineralization and foodweb dynamics to verify the hypothesis that ADMSW would immobilize N right after addition to soil in contrast to addition with CMSW. Another hypothesis was that the mesofauna ( enchytraeids and microarthropods) would stimulate N release from the decomposer community. We measured excretion of NH4+ - N and urea- N from the mesofauna and hypothesized that enchytraeids would release urea. ADMSW and CMSW were amended to pots with sandy loam and barley. The pots were divided into treatments with or without mesofauna. Mesofauna, plant N and biomass, soil N and ergosterol ( fungal biomass) were measured over a 113- day period of four equidistant samplings. Soil respiration, N mineralization and N release by the mesofauna were modelled from concurrent studies. ADMSW-and CMSW- treated soils initially (< 20 days) immobilized N. The amendments did not increase plant growth substantially, and this was probably due to N- limitation in the early stages of plant growth. Enchytraeid abundance was about three times higher in ADMSW- than CMSW-treated soils, indicating that ADMSW contained more labile compounds, bacteria, and microfauna. The mesofauna did not affect N- content, but the cumulated NH4+ - N excreted by the mesofauna was estimated to be substantial and about one- fifth of total plant N in ADMSW. An explanation for this discrepancy might be that in the absence of the mesofauna, other members of the detrivore and microbivore community performed the mesofauna's function. Neither enchytraeids nor microarthropods excreted urea.