Abstract

Abstract The aim of the present study was to investigate whether land-use intensity (LUI) contributes to spatial variation in microbial abundance and function in grassland ecosystems. At one time point, three sites at low (unfertilized pastures), at intermediate (fertilized mown pastures) and at high (fertilized mown meadows) LUIs were selected in southern Germany. Within each of these nine grassland sites, 54 soil samples (0–10 cm) were taken in a 10 m × 10 m area in spring. Plot-scale spatial dependence and autocorrelation of soil biogeochemical properties, microbial biomass and enzymes involved in C-, N- and P-cycling were analyzed. Applying geostatistics (exponential or spherical model) revealed that most chemical and microbiological properties showed at least a moderate spatial autocorrelation. Chemical soil properties (e.g. C org , N t , pH) were characterized by practical ranges (pRange) of between 1 and 14 m, whereas soil microbiological properties showed a greater variation of pRanges, providing evidence of spatial heterogeneity at multiple scales. The expected decrease in small-scale spatial heterogeneity in high LUI could not be confirmed for microbiological soil properties, because sampling in early spring might have reduced the influence of growing plants and fertilization. However, microbial biomass carbon was significantly greater in high LUIs, indicating that the benefit to soil microbial populations from the long-term increase in substrate and nutrient availability in fertilized grasslands is independent from factors affecting spatial structures in the short-term.

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