Potential use of dehydrogenase activity as an index of microbial activity in degraded soils
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis
- Vol. 28 (1-2) , 123-134
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00103629709369777
Abstract
Soils from many portions of the Mediterranean region are subjected to progressive degradation as a result of erosion by wind and water. As a consequence, the fertility level of these degraded soils is declining. This report studied the dehydrogenase activity of 18 soils, all of which were subjected to processes of erosion, in order to ascertain whether such activity could serve as a marker of the microbial activity of a degraded soil. The dehydrogenase activity of the soils studied was not correlated with their organic matter content, indicating that total organic matter was not representative of the microbial activity of degraded soil. An analysis of principal components showed a similar behavior between other indices of microbial activity (basal respiration and biomass carbon) and the dehydrogenase activity values. This data confirmed that dehydrogenase activity can be used as a sensitive marker of soil degradation and soil microbial activity.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
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