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Alguacil, MM; Caravaca, F; Azcon, R; Roldan, A. 2008. Changes in biological activity of a degraded Mediterranean soil after using microbially-treated dry olive cake as a biosolid amendment and
arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL BIOLOGY. 44(3):347-354.
Address:
Caravaca, F, CSIC Ctr Edafol & Biol Aplicada Segura, Dept Soil & Water
Conservat, POB 164,Campus Espinardo, Murcia 30100, Spain
A field experiment was carried out to assess the effect of a combined
treatment involving addition of Aspergillus niger-treated dry olive
cake (DryOC) in the presence of rock phosphate, plus pre-transplant
inoculation of seedlings with the arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi
Glomus intraradices, Glomus deserticola or Glomus mosseae, on the
establishment of Dorycnium pentaphyllum L., in a degraded semiarid
Mediterranean area. Associated changes in soil labile C fractions,
enzyme activities and aggregate stability were also observed. One year
after planting, the combined treatment of fermented DryOC addition and
inoculation with AM fungi, particularly with G. mosseae (on average
328% greater than control plants), had the strongest effect on the
shoot biomass of D. pentaphyllum. Only the fermented DryOC addition
increased assimilable P, total N and aggregate stability, the greatest
increase being in the soil available P content (about four-fold higher
than in the non-amended soil). Both the addition of fermented DryOC and
the mycorrhizal inoculation treatments significantly increased enzyme
activities of rhizosphere soil (dehydrogenase, protease-BAA, acid
phosphatase and P-glucosidase). The microbially-treated DryOC proved to
be an effective amendment for improving the soil quality which, in
turn, enhanced the success of revegetation with mycorrhizal D.
pentaphyllum seedlings.
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