Abstract

The number and biomass of microorganisms in the soils under lichen, grass-bilberry, and grass spruce forests of old age were studied on the Kola Peninsula. The dry biomass of microorganisms in the organic soil horizons was shown to reach 28 mg/g with a predominance (96 to 99%) of micromycetes. At tree trunk sites, in the organic horizons of all the soils studied, where the contents of organic carbon and mineral nutrients were higher, the number and biomass of all the groups of microorganisms was lower than in those in the soils of the gaps. The factors limiting the functioning of microorganisms in the soils under spruce tree crowns are thought to be the high acidity of the water flowing down the tree trunks and the high phenol content in it. In the mineral horizons of the soils, the patterns of the microorganisms were opposite: in all the spruce forests, the fungal biomass was the highest in the soils of the trunk zones, as well as the bacterial population and biomass in the grass spruce forest. In the latter, the maximal length of the actinomycete mycelium was also recorded in the soil of the trunk zones with the elevated contents of carbon and mineral nutrients.

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