A green house experiment was designed to test the idea that competition for inorganic nitrogen (N) between plants and heterotrophic microorganisms occurs in soils with high C:N ratios, qualifying for N limited microbial activity, but not at low C:N ratios. The short- term (24 h) N-15 uptake by the grass Festuca gigantea and microorganisms in planted and unplanted soils was determined, and the bacterial activity was measured by the H-3-thymidine incorporation technique. Two deciduous forest soils, with C:N-ratios of 20 and 31, and the 20 soil amended with litter to a C:N ratio of 34, were used. A novel and important part of the experimental design was the preparation of the unplanted reference soil with plants present until the competition a...
Differences in species' abilities to capture resources can drive competitive hierarchies, succession...
1. In a microcosm experiment we examined the effects of individual species of microarthropods, and v...
were placed into soil as separate layers, negative effect of plant roots on microbial growth was obs...
To investigate how the level of microbial activity in grassland soils affects plant–microbial compet...
Sources of competition for limited soil resources, such as nitrogen, include competitive interaction...
We tested whether the presence of plant roots would impair the uptake of ammonium ([Formula: see tex...
Nitrogen (N) limitation is common in most terrestrial ecosystems, often leading to strong competitio...
To test the hypothesis that dominant plant species could acquire different nitrogen (N) forms over a...
We used dual labelled stable isotope (13C and 15N) techniques to examine how grassland plant species...
Catch crops (CC) reduce nitrate leaching, and may resolve a major concern in nitrogen (N) intensive ...
Contents 656 I. 657 II. 657 III. 658 IV. 659 V. 661 VI. 662 VII. 663 VIII. 665 666 References 666 Su...
We tested the hypothesis that plants only stimulate net mineralization of N when intense competition...
The growing awareness that plants might use a variety of nitrogen (N) forms, both organic and inorga...
A laboratory experiment was designed to challenge the idea that the ON ratio of forest soils may con...
Evidence that plants differ in their ability to take up both organic (ON) and inorganic (IN) forms o...
Differences in species' abilities to capture resources can drive competitive hierarchies, succession...
1. In a microcosm experiment we examined the effects of individual species of microarthropods, and v...
were placed into soil as separate layers, negative effect of plant roots on microbial growth was obs...
To investigate how the level of microbial activity in grassland soils affects plant–microbial compet...
Sources of competition for limited soil resources, such as nitrogen, include competitive interaction...
We tested whether the presence of plant roots would impair the uptake of ammonium ([Formula: see tex...
Nitrogen (N) limitation is common in most terrestrial ecosystems, often leading to strong competitio...
To test the hypothesis that dominant plant species could acquire different nitrogen (N) forms over a...
We used dual labelled stable isotope (13C and 15N) techniques to examine how grassland plant species...
Catch crops (CC) reduce nitrate leaching, and may resolve a major concern in nitrogen (N) intensive ...
Contents 656 I. 657 II. 657 III. 658 IV. 659 V. 661 VI. 662 VII. 663 VIII. 665 666 References 666 Su...
We tested the hypothesis that plants only stimulate net mineralization of N when intense competition...
The growing awareness that plants might use a variety of nitrogen (N) forms, both organic and inorga...
A laboratory experiment was designed to challenge the idea that the ON ratio of forest soils may con...
Evidence that plants differ in their ability to take up both organic (ON) and inorganic (IN) forms o...
Differences in species' abilities to capture resources can drive competitive hierarchies, succession...
1. In a microcosm experiment we examined the effects of individual species of microarthropods, and v...
were placed into soil as separate layers, negative effect of plant roots on microbial growth was obs...