Plant Soil Environ., 2020, 66(2):93-98 | DOI: 10.17221/671/2019-PSE

The effect of different copper doses and organic fertilisation on soil's enzymatic activityOriginal Paper

Beata Kuziemska, Andrzej Wysokiński ORCID...*, Joanna Trębicka
Faculty of Agrobioengineering and Animal Husbandry, Siedlce University of Natural Sciences and Humanities, Siedlce, Poland

A three-year pot experiment carried out in the vegetation hall in 2014-2016 included studying the enzymatic activity of soil, into which various amounts of copper: (100, 200 and 300 mg Cu/kg soil) and organic materials (cattle manure, chicken manure, post-mushroom substrate) were introduced, used separately, at a soil-introduction dose of 2 g Corg/kg. Copper and organic materials were used once, only in the first year of the study, before sowing test plant orchard grass. In soil collected after the last (fourth) swath of grass in each year of the study, the activity of urease, dehydrogenases, acid, and alkaline phosphatase was determined. Applications of copper to the soil, regardless of its dose, resulted in a decrease in urease, dehydrogenases and alkaline phosphatase and an increase in acid phosphatase activity. The inactivating effect of this metal on the activity of urease, dehydrogenases and alkaline phosphatase increased with the increase of its dose. Organic fertilisation generally increased the enzymatic activity of the analysed soil. In subsequent years of the study, urease and alkaline phosphatase activity decreased, while acid phosphatase activity increased. Dehydrogenase activity did not change significantly in subsequent years of the study.

Keywords: enzymes; micronutrient; microorganism; toxic element; heavy metal

Published: February 29, 2020  Show citation

ACS AIP APA ASA Harvard Chicago Chicago Notes IEEE ISO690 MLA NLM Turabian Vancouver
Kuziemska B, Wysokiński A, Trębicka J. The effect of different copper doses and organic fertilisation on soil's enzymatic activity. Plant Soil Environ. 2020;66(2):93-98. doi: 10.17221/671/2019-PSE.
Download citation

References

  1. Acosta-Martínez V., Cruz L., Sotomayor-Ramírez D., Pérez-Alegría L. (2007): Enzyme activities as affected by soil properties and land use in a tropical watershed. Applied Soil Ecology, 35: 35-45. Go to original source...
  2. Angelovičová L., Lodenius M., Tulisalo E., Fazekašová D. (2014): Effect of heavy metals on soil enzyme activity at different field conditions in middle spis mining area (Slovakia). Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 93: 670-675. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  3. Becker J.M., Parkin T., Nakatsu C.H., Wilbur J.D., Konopka A. (2006): Bacterial activity, community structure, and centimeter-scale spatial heterogeneity in contaminated soil. Microbial Ecology, 51: 220-231. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  4. Bhavya V.P., Anil Kumar S., Kiran S.K., Alur A., Shivakumar K.M., Shivanna M. (2018): Effect of different cropping system on important soil enzyme activity, organic carbon and microbial activity with different depth. International Journal of Current Microbiology and Applied Sciences, 7: 315-322. Go to original source...
  5. Błońska E., Lasota J., Zwydak M. (2017): The relationship between soil properties, enzyme activity and land use. Forest Research Papers, 78: 39-44. Go to original source...
  6. Casida L.E.Jr., Klein D.D.A., Santoro T. (1964): Soil dehydrogenase activity. Soil Sciences, 98: 371-376. Go to original source...
  7. Chang E.H., Chung R.S., Tsai Y.H. (2007): Effect of different application rates of organic fertilizer on soil enzyme activity and microbial population. Soil Science and Plant Nutrition, 52: 132-140. Go to original source...
  8. Chaperon S., Sauvé S. (2007): Toxicity interaction of metals (Ag, Cu, Hg, Zn) to urease and dehydrogenase activities in soils. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 39: 2329-2338. Go to original source...
  9. Cuske M., Karczewska A. (2016): Influence of organic matter on the solubility of heavy metals in contaminated soils - a review of literature. Environmental Engineering, 162: 39-59.
  10. Dick R.P. (1992): A review: long-term effects of agricultural systems on soil biochemical and microbial parameters. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, 40: 25-36. Go to original source...
  11. Fernández-Calviño D., Martín A., Arias-Estévez M., Bååth E., DíazRaviña M. (2010): Microbial community structure of vineyard soils with different pH and copper content. Applied Soil Ecology, 46: 276-282. Go to original source...
  12. Hoffman G., Teicher K. (1961): Einkolorimetrisches Verfahrenzur Bestimmung der Ureaseaktivitat in Boden. Zeit Pflanzenernaehr Dung Bodenkunde, 95: 55-63. Go to original source...
  13. Kalembasa S., Kuziemska B. (2011): Effect of nickel contamination on soil enzymatic activity. Fresenius Environmental Bulletin, 20: 1724-1731.
  14. Kotroczó Z., Veres Z., Fekete I., Krakomperger Z., Tóth J.A., Lajtha K., Tóthmérész B. (2014): Soil enzyme activity in response to long-term organic matter manipulation. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 70: 237-243. Go to original source...
  15. Li Q., Hu Q.J., Zhang C.L., Jin Z.J. (2018): Effects of Pb, Cd, Zn, and Cu on soil enzyme activity and soil properties related to agricultural land-use practices in Karst area contaminated by Pb-Zn tailings. Polish Journal of Environmental Studies, 27: 2623-2632. Go to original source...
  16. Nowak J., Szymczak J., Słobodzian T. (2003): Am attempt to determination of the 50% toxicity threshold for different heavy metals affecting the phosphatase activity. Advances of Agricultural Sciences Problem Issues, 492: 241-248.
  17. Oliveira A., Pampulha M.E. (2006): Effects of long-term heavy metal contamination on soil microbial characteristics. Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering, 102: 157-161. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  18. Olszowska G. (2016): Soil enzymatic activity in artificially and naturally regenerated forests after wind damage in north-eastern Poland. Forest Research Papers, 77: 89-93. Go to original source...
  19. Russel S. (2005): The significance of studies on enzymes in soil environment. Acta Agrophysica, Dissertations and Monographs, 3: 5-9.
  20. Tabatabai M.A., Bremner J.M. (1969): Use of p-nitrophenol phosphate for assay of soil phosphatase activity. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 1: 301-307. Go to original source...
  21. Wang Y.P., Shi J.Y., Wang H., Lin Q., Chen X.C., Chen Y.X. (2007): The influence of soil heavy metals pollution on soil microbial biomass, enzyme activity, and community composition near a copper smelter. Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety, 67: 75-81. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  22. Wang Q.Y., Zhou D.M., Cang L. (2009): Microbial and enzyme properties of apple orchard soil as affected by long-term application of copper fungicide. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 41: 1504-1509. Go to original source...
  23. Wyszkowska J., Borowik A., Kucharski M., Kucharski J. (2013): Effect of cadmium, copper and zinc on plants, soil microorganisms and soil enzymes. Journal of Elementology, 18: 769-796.
  24. Wyszkowska J., Boros-Lajszner E., Lajszner W., Kucharski J. (2017): Reaction of soil enzymes and spring barley to copper chloride and copper sulphate. Environmental Earth Sciences, 76: 403. Go to original source...
  25. Wyszkowska J., Kucharski J., Lajszner W. (2005): Enzymatic activities in different soils contaminated with copper. Polish Journal of Environmental Studies, 14: 659-664.
  26. Zhan J., Sun Q.Y. (2014): Development of microbial properties and enzyme activities in copper mine wasteland during natural restoration. Catena, 116: 86-94. Go to original source...

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY NC 4.0), which permits non-comercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original publication is properly cited. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.