Abstract

Very large microbial biomass was revealed in peat bogs by means of fluorescence microscopy. In ombrotrophic peatlands, the pool of the dry-weight microbial biomass in the 1.5-m layer constituted 3-4 t/ha and was twice as high as in the minerotrophic peat bogs. Fungal biomass was predominant (55-99%) in ombrotrophic peatlands, while bacterial biomass predominated in minerotrophic peatlands (55-86%). In ombrotrophic peatlands, the microbial biomass was concentrated in the upper layers, while in minerotrophic peatlands, it was uniformly distributed in the bulk. After drainage, the microbial pool in the ombrotrophic peatlands increased twofold; that in the minerotrophic peatlands remained at the same level. The potential activity of nitrogen fixation and denitrification was revealed across the whole profile of the peatlands. The average values of these potential activities were five times higher in the minerotrophic peatlands, where bacterial biomass predominated.

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