Abstract

The effect of polluted snow melt waters on the number of soil bacteria was determined using soil cores extracted from an upland catchment in the Cairngorm Mountains, Scotland. Total numbers of viable heterotrophic bacteria and bacterial denitrifiers were determined using plate and MPN counts. Separate soil cores were treated with simulated melt waters representative of either the composition of the first melt fraction from polluted or leached snowpacks. The number of bacteria in the Ah soil horizon (Hodgson, 1974) treated with polluted snow melt (PSM) water decreased significantly by 28-fold, but increased by 11-fold in the BC horizon. Denitrifier numbers decreased by 8-fold in the Ah horizon, but increased by over 2-fold lower down the profile. Overall the bacterial community exposed to simulated leached snow melt (LSM) waters showed little change in the Ah horizon. In the BC horizon (Hodgson, 1974), total viable bacterial numbers decreased by 20-fold, but denitrifiers numbers were unaffected.

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