Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T10:15:56.041Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Soil Improvement Following Addition of Chipped Wood from Twigs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 October 2009

Roger Lalande*
Affiliation:
Soil Microbiologist, Centre de recherche et de développement sur les sols et les grandes cultures, Agriculture et Agroalimentaire Canada, 2560, boul. Hochelaga, Sainte-Foy (Québec), CanadaG1V 2J3;
Valentin Furlan
Affiliation:
Mycorrhizologist, Centre de recherche et de développement sur les sols et les grandes cultures, Agriculture et Agroalimentaire Canada, 2560, boul. Hochelaga, Sainte-Foy (Québec), CanadaG1V 2J3;
Denis A. Angers
Affiliation:
Soil Scientist, Centre de recherche et de développement sur les sols et les grandes cultures, Agriculture et Agroalimentaire Canada, 2560, boul. Hochelaga, Sainte-Foy (Québec), CanadaG1V 2J3;
Gilles Lemieux
Affiliation:
Professor, Département des sciences du bois et de la forét, Faculté de foresterie et de géomatique, Université Laval, Québec (Québec), CanadaG1K 7P4.
*
Corresponding author is R. Lalande ([email protected]).
Get access

Abstract

Wood residues are applied to soils to improve their organic matter content and related biological, physical, and chemical properties. We monitored the changes in soil total C and N content, the bacterial, fungal and actinomycetal populations, and microbial biomass and activity during 20 weeks in the first season following the application of chipped wood from twigs (CWT), and as residual effects during the second growing season on a loamy soil (coarse loamy, mixed, frigid, Humic Fragiorthod) in Sainte-Brigitte-des-Saults (Québec) Canada. Wet-aggregate stability and the content of nutrients of the soil also were determined. Adding CWT stimulated the bacterial and actinomycetal populations very rapidly (within 8 weeks); in the second season the effect was less pronounced and gradually disappeared. The most significant and long-lasting effect was on the fungal population in two consecutive years of observation, with increases of up to 24-fold. This stimulation of fungi possibly was responsible for the large and significant increase in wet-aggregate stability observed in the second year. The effect of CWT on alkaline phosphatase activity and total C and N was observed only in the second season. Some immobilization was seen only in the season immediately following residue application. The addition of the CWT also supplied micronutrients, in particular Zn, which would make it a useful source of some elements in deficient soils. Application of CWT to this soil greatly improved its quality, as revealed by its biological, chemical, and physical attributes.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1.Allison, F.E. 1973. Soil Organic Matter and Its Role in Crop Production. Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.Google Scholar
2.Anderson, J.M. 1988. Spatio-temporal effects of invertebrates on soil processes. Biology and Fertility of Soils 6:216227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3.Angers, D.A., and Mehuys, G.R.. 1993. Aggregate stability to water. In Carter, M.R. (ed). Soil Sampling and Methods of Analysis. Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, Florida, pp. 651657.Google Scholar
4.Buchanan, M., and Gliessman, S.R.. 1991. How compost fertilization affects soil nitrogen and crop yield. Bio-Cycle 32:7277.Google Scholar
5.Conseil des Productions Végetales du Québec 1982. Légumes, Culture. Comité des cultures légumières. Ministère de l'Agriculture, des Pêcheries et de l'Alimentation du Québec, agdex 250/20, Québec, Qc., Canada.Google Scholar
6.Flaig, W. 1978. Biochimie de la matière organique du sol. In L'emploi des matières organiques comme engrais verts. No. 27. United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, Rome, Italy, pp. 3476.Google Scholar
7.Foshee, W.G., Goff, W.D., Tilt, K.M., and Williams, J.D.. 1996. Organic mulches increase growth of young pecan trees. HortScience 31:811812.Google Scholar
8.Garcia, S., Latge, J.P., Prevost, M.C., and Leisola, M.S.A.. 1987. Wood degradation by white-rot fungi: Cytochemical studies using lignin peroxidase-immunoglobin-gold-complex. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 53:23842387.Google Scholar
9.Gregorich, E.G., Carter, M.R., Angers, D.A., Monreal, C.M., and Ellert, B.H.. 1994. Towards a minimum data set to assess soil organic matter quality in agricultural soils. Canadian J. Soil Sci. 74:367385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
10.Grigal, D.F., Ohmann, L.F., and Brander, R.B.. 1976. Seasonal dynamics of tall shrubs in Northeastern Minnesota: Biomass and nutrient element changes. Forest Sci. 22:195208.Google Scholar
11.Hendrickson, O. 1987. Winter branch nutrients in northern conifers and hardwoods. Forest Sci. 33:10681074.Google Scholar
12.Kokalis-Burelle, N., and Rodriguez-Kàbana, R.. 1994. Changes in populations of soil microorganisms, nematodes and enzyme activity associated with application of powdered pine bark. Plant and Soil 162:169175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
13.Kuster, E., and Williams, S.T.. 1964. Selection of media for isolation of streptomycetes. Nature (London) 202:928929.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
14.Lemieux, G. 1986. Le bois raméal et les mécanismes de fertilité du sol. Ministère de l'énergie et des resources, Direction de la sylviculture et Département des sciences du bois et de la forêt, Faculté de foresterie et de géomatique, Université Laval, Québec, Canada.Google Scholar
15.Lynch, J.M., and Bragg, E.. 1985. Microorganisms and soil aggregate stability. Advances in Soil Sci. 2:133172.Google Scholar
16.Martin, J.P. 1950. Use of acid, rose bengal, and streptomycin in the plate method for estimating soil fungi. Soil Sci. 69:215227.Google Scholar
17.N'dayegamiye, N., and Dubé, A.. 1986. L'effet de l'incorporation de matières ligneuses sur l'évolution des propriétés chimiques du sol et sur la croissance des plantes. Canadian J. Soil Sci. 66:623631.Google Scholar
18.N'dayegamiye, N., and Angers, D.A.. 1993. Organic matter characteristics and water-stable aggregation of a sandy loam soil after 9 years of woodresidue applications. Canadian J. Soil Sci. 73:115122.Google Scholar
19.Perucci, P., Scarponi, L., and Businelli, M.. 1984. Enzyme activities in a clay-loam soil amended with various crop residues. Plant and Soil 81:345351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
20.SAS Institute. 1990. GLM-VARCOMP, SAS/STAT User's Guide, vol. 2, version 6, 4th ed. Cary, N.C.Google Scholar
21.Simard, R.R., Evans, L.J., and Bates, T.E.. 1988. Effects of addition of CaCO3 and P on the soil solution composition of a Podzolic soil. Canadian J. Soil Sci. 68:4152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
22.Smith, J.L., Papendick, R.I., Bezdicek, D.F., and Lynch, J.M.. 1993. Soil organic matter dynamics and crop residue management. In Metting, F.B. (ed). Soil Microbial Ecology. Marcel Dekker, New York, N.Y. pp. 6594.Google Scholar
23.Sommerfeldt, T.G., and MacKay, D.C.. 1987. Utilization of cattle manure containing wood shavings: Effect on soil and crop. Canadian J. Soil Sci. 67:309316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
24.Tabatabai, M.A., and Bremner, J.M.. 1969. Use of p-nitrophenyl phosphate for assay of soil phosphatase activity. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 1:301307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
25.Tisdall, J.M., and Oades, J.M.. 1982. Organic matter and water-stable aggregates in soils. J. Soil Sci. 33:141163.Google Scholar
26.Tyler, G. 1981. Heavy metals in soils: Biology and biochemistry. In Paul, E.A. and Ladd, J.N. (eds). Soil Biochemistry. Marcel Dekker, New York, N.Y. pp. 371414.Google Scholar
27.Vance, E.D., Brookes, P.C., and Jenkinson, D.S.. 1987. An extraction method for measuring soil microbial biomass carbon. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 19:703707.Google Scholar
28.Van den Beldt, R.J. 1990. Agroforestry in the semiarid tropics. In MacDicken, K.G., and Vergara, N.T. (eds). Agroforestry: Classification and Management. John Wiley & Sons, New York, N.Y. pp. 150194.Google Scholar
29.Vincent, J.M. 1970. A Manual for the Practical Study of Root-nodule Bacteria. International Biological Programme Handbook no. 15. Blackwell Scientific, Oxford, U.K.Google Scholar