Citation Information

  • Title : Soil hydrolase activities and kinetic properties as affected by wheat cropping systems of Northeastern China.
  • Source : Plant Soil and Environment
  • Publisher : Czech Acad Agric Sci
  • Volume : 56
  • Issue : 11
  • Pages : 526-532
  • Year : 2010
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Dong, G.
    • Chen, Z.
    • Wu, Z.
    • Sun, C.
    • Chen, L.
    • Zhang, Y.
  • Climates: Hot summer continental (Dsa, Dfa, Dwa).
  • Cropping Systems: Maize. Crop-pasture rotations. Intercropping. Soybean. Wheat.
  • Countries: China.

Summary

Agricultural practices that reduce soil degradation and improve agriculture sustainability are important particularly for dry hilly land of Chaoyang County in the Liaoning Province, North-east China, where cinnamon soils are widely distributed and mainly for wheat production. The impacts of 10-year cropping systems (wheat-cabbage sequential cropping, wheat-corn intercrop, wheat-sunflower rotation, wheat-soybean rotation) on soil enzyme properties of surface-soil (0-20 cm) were studied. Total carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur, and nine soil hydrolases related to nutrient availabilities (beta-galactosidase, alpha-galactosidase, beta-glucosidase, alpha-glucosidase, urease, protease, phosphomonoesterase, phosphodiesterase, arylsulphatase) and five enzymes kinetic characters were examined. Wheat-corn intercrop systems had higher total C, total N, total P and total S concentrations than wheat-soybean and wheat-sunflower rotation systems. Most test enzyme activities (alpha-galactosidase, beta-galactosidase, alpha-glucosidase, beta-glucosidase, urease, protease, phosphomonoesterase and arylsulphatase) showed the highest activities under wheat-corn intercropping system. Urease, protease and phosphodiesterase activities of wheat-cabbage sequential cropping system were significantly higher than two rotation systems. The maximum reaction rates of enzymes ( Vmax) were higher than apparent enzyme activity, which suggests larger potential activity of enzymes, while not all kinetic parameters were adaptive as soil quality indicators in dry hilly cinnamon soil.

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