Abstract

ABSTRACT Decomposition of organic matters in volcanic soils (ando soils) is generally slowed by sorption onto short-range-order minerals, while decomposition of non-charged substrates such as cellulose and glucose is hypothesized to be promoted by high microbial biomass and nitrogen availability, irrespective of short-range-order minerals. To analyze factors regulating decomposition activities of cellulose and glucose, we measured the decomposition rates of cellulose filter papers and the mineralization rates of 14C-labeled glucose in five volcanic soils in Japan. Glucose mineralization activities increased with increasing microbial biomass C and N, while cellulose decomposition activities (standardized with cumulative temperature) were not related to microbial biomass C or N. Cellulose decomposition activities increased with increasing ratio of soil available N relative to microbial biomass N (microbial N availability), while they decreased with decreasing soil pH and with increasing fungal activities. Soils with relatively high soil pH and microbial N availability exhibit the relatively high potentials of cellulose decomposition. Because cellulose decomposition, rather than glucose mineralization, is a rate-limiting step, soil pH and microbial N availability, rather than microbial biomass, could primarily regulate decomposition rates of cellulose and glucose in volcanic soils.

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