Field calibration of soil-core microcosms: Ecosystem structural and functional comparisons
- 1 December 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Microbial Ecology
- Vol. 21 (1) , 175-189
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02539152
Abstract
Microcosms containing intact soil-cores are a potential biotechnology risk assessment tool for assessing the ecological effects of genetically engineered microorganisms before they are released to the field; however, microcosms must first be calibrated to ensure that they adequately simulate key field parameters. Soil-core microcosms were compared with the field in terms of ecological response to the introduction of a large inoculum of a rifampicin-resistant rhizobacterium,Pseudomonas sp. RC1. RC1 was inoculated into intact soil-core microcosms incubated in the laboratory at ambient temperature (22°C) and in a growth chamber with temperature fluctuations that mimicked a verage field values, as well as into field lysimeters and plots. The effect of the introduced bacterium on ecosystem structure, including wheat rhizoplane populations of total and fluorescent pseudomonads, total heterotrophic bacteria, and the diversity of total heterotrophic bacteria, was determined. Fluorescent pseudomonads were present on the rhizoplane in significantly lower numbers in soil inoculated with RC1, in both microcosms and the field. Conditions for microbial growth appeared to be most favorable in the growth chamber microcosm, as evidenced by higher populations of heterotrophs and a greater species diversity on the rhizoplane at the three-leaf stage of wheat growth. Ecosystem functional parameters, as determined by soil dehydrogenase activity, plant biomass production, and15N-fertilizer uptake by wheat, were different in the four systems. The stimulation of soil dehydrogenase activity by the addition of alfalfa was greater in the microcosms than in the field. In general, growth chamber microcosms, which simulated average field temperatures, were better predictors of field behavior than microcosms incubated continuously at 22°C.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evaluation of intact soil‐core microcosms for determining potential impacts on nutrient dynamics by genetically engineered microorganismsEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 1990
- Fate of Tn5 mutants of root growth-inhibiting Pseudomonas sp. in intact soil-core microcosmsCanadian Journal of Microbiology, 1989
- The Planned Introduction of Genetically Engineered Organisms: Ecological Considerations and RecommendationsEcology, 1989
- Colonization of Winter Wheat Roots by Inhibitory RhizobacteriaSoil Science Society of America Journal, 1985
- Comparison of pots versus microcosms for predicting agroecosystem effects due to waste amendmentEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 1985
- Colonization of Wheat Roots by a Fluorescent Pseudomonad Suppressive to Take-AllPhytopathology®, 1983
- Availability of 15N‐Labeled Nitrogen in Fertilizer and in Wheat Straw to Wheat in Tilled and No‐Till SoilSoil Science Society of America Journal, 1982
- Effect ofPseudomonas putidaand a Synthetic Iron Chelator on Induction of Soil Suppressiveness to Fusarium Wilt PathogensPhytopathology®, 1982
- Use of Tracers For Soil And Fertilizer Nitrogen ResearchPublished by Elsevier ,1976
- Comparison of agar media for counts of viable soil bacteriaSoil Biology and Biochemistry, 1975