Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10846157 | Soil Biology and Biochemistry | 2005 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
The knowledge of biochemical properties of urban soils can help to understand nutrient cycling in urban areas and provide a database for urban soil management. Soil samples were taken from 10 soil profiles in the city of Stuttgart, Germany, differing in land use-from an essentially undisturbed garden area to highly disturbed high-density and railway areas. A variety of soil biotic (microbial biomass, enzyme activities) and abiotic properties (total organic C, elemental C, total N) were measured up to 1.9Â m depth. Soil organic matter was frequently enriched in the subsoil. Microbial biomass in the top horizons ranged from 0.17 to 1.64Â g CÂ kgâ1, and from 0.01 to 0.30Â g NÂ kgâ1, respectively. The deepest soil horizon at 170-190Â cm, however, contained 0.12Â g CÂ kgâ1 and 0.05Â kg NÂ kgâ1 in the microbial biomass. In general, arylsulphatase and urease activity decreased with depth but in three profiles potentially mineralizable N in the deepest horizons was higher than in soil layers directly overlying. In deeply modified urban soils, subsoil beside topsoil properties have to be included in the evaluation of soil quality. This knowledge is essential because consumption of natural soils for housing and traffic has to be reduced by promoting inner city densification.
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Authors
Klaus Lorenz, Ellen Kandeler,