Abstract
The relationship between phosphatase activity and soil was studied in 14 mounds and adjacent control soils of plant debris-feeding termites from a Venezuelan savanna. The soils were assayed for acid phosphatase activity with p-nitrophenyl phosphate as substrate and for the effect of inorganic P (300 μg P g−1). The proportion of organic matter in the mounds was four times that found in topsoils, indicating strong selection by the termites for organic-rich soil fractions. A comparison of phosphatase activities found no difference between mounds and adjacent soils. It seems possible that the expected increase of enzyme activity in mounds, due to a higher C content, was counteracted by enzyme inhibition due to higher levels of available inorganic P in the mounds. Addition of inorganic P to soil and mound material reduced enzyme activities by 10%–45%, but after a 2-day incubation period differences between the treated soil and the control tended to disappear.
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