Evidence for Fungal Dominance of Denitrification and Codenitrification in a Grassland Soil

Soil Science Society of America Journal
September 1, 2002
Cited by 422

Abstract

Fungi are capable of nitrification and denitrification and often dominate the microbial biomass of temperate grassland soils. We determined the contributions of bacteria and fungi to N 2 O and N 2 production in a grassland soil from Northern Ireland by combining the substrate‐induced respiration inhibition method and the 15 N gas‐flux method. Streptomycin (C 21 H 39 N 7 O 12 ) was used as the bacterial inhibitor and cycloheximide (C 15 H 23 NO 4 ) as the fungal inhibitor. By labeling the NH 4 and NO 3 pools, we tested the hypothesis that fungi produce N 2 O and N 2 solely by the reduction of NO 3 Cycloheximide decreased the flux of N 2 O by 89% and streptomycin decreased the flux by 23%, indicating that fungi were responsible for most of the N 2 O production. All of the N 2 O was derived from NO 3 reduction. Labeled N 2 was only detected in control and streptomycin treatments. The distribution of the 15 N atoms in the labeled N 2 indicated that the source of the labeling was predominantly the NO 3 pool, but that the process of formation was not dominated by denitrification. Codenitrification, where a 15 N atom from labeled nitrogen dioxide (NO 2 ) combines with a 14 N atom from a natural abundance source, was proposed as the process forming labeled N 2 About 92% of the labeled N 2 was estimated to be due to codenitrification and 8% due to denitrification. The flux of N 2 O was always greater than the flux of N 2 , the mole fraction of N 2 O averaging 0.7. Fungal denitrification could be of ecological significance because N 2 O is the dominant gaseous end product.


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