Bg. Zhang et al., Changes in microbial biomass C, N, and P and enzyme activities in soil incubated with the earthworms Metaphire guillelmi or Eisenia fetida, SOIL BIOL B, 32(14), 2000, pp. 2055-2062
Earthworms are ubiquitous in soil and ingest large amounts of soil, organic
matter and leaf litter. To assess changes in organic matter fractions afte
r passage through the earthworm gut, we measured microbial biomass C, N and
P and the fungal-to-bacterial ratios in worm-worked soil (WWS), obtained b
y incubating soil for 24 h with large numbers of the anecic earthworm Metap
hire guillelmi (1.5 ratio of fresh weight worms: dry weight soil). Microbia
l biomass C, N and P were estimated by the fumigation-extraction methods, a
nd fungal-to-bacterial ratios by selective inhibition using substrate induc
ed respiration. Enzyme activities in the gut of M. guillelmi were also comp
ared with an epigeic earthworm species Eisenia fetida. Activities of cellul
ase, protease, chitinase, acid and alkaline phosphatases, in gut, casts and
uningested soil were measured.
In WWS, microbial biomass decreased (130 mug C g(-1) soil), and there was a
concomitant increase of available nutrients (27 and 10 mug g(-1) soil for
ninhydrin-reactive N and inorganic P, respectively). There was no differenc
e between the glucose-sensitive microbial biomass (NIB) and the control but
the respiratory quotient was greater (2.85 +/- 0.17 and 2.95 +/- 0.07 mug
CO2-C g(-1) soil h(-1) for WWS and control, respectively). The fungal-to-ba
cterial ratio was slightly higher in WWS than in uningested soil (1.61 vs.
1.35).
Cellulase activity was greater in the gut of the epigeic earthworm than in
that of the anecic one (152.8 +/- 18.7 vs. 18.9 +/- 1.3 mug glucose g(-1) w
orm fw h(-1)); conversely, protease and phosphatase activities were signifi
cantly higher in gut of the anecic specie as opposed to the epigeic species
. The activity of cellulolytic enzymes was slightly higher in casts than in
soil; while activities of protease, acid (pH 6.5) and alkaline (pH 9.0) ph
osphatases were lower in earthworm casts than in the uningested soils (prot
ease, acid and alkaline phosphatase activity were 29.5 +/- 1.7 mg tyrosine
g(-1) worm fw h(-1), 570 +/- 2.9, 748 +/- 7.3 mug p-nitrophenol g(-1) soil
h(-1) in soil and 17.8 +/- 2.0 mg tyrosine g(-1) worm fw h(-1), 327 +/- 26.
7, 549 +/- 19.7 mug p-nitrophenol g(-1) soil h(-1) in casts, respectively).
We conclude that micro-organisms are used by earthworms as a secondary foo
d resource; and that passage through earthworm gut decreases the total soil
MB and increase the active components of MB. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd
. All rights reserved.