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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 43:917-920 (1979)
© 1979 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Effect of Concentration on Decomposition of Some 14C-labeled Phenolic Compounds, Benzoic Acid, Glucose, Cellulose, Wheat Straw, and Chlorella Protein in Soil1

J. P. Martin and K. Haider2

ABSTRACT

The decomposition of ring-14C-labeled anisic, ferulic, and benzoic acids and of O14CH3-labeled ferulic acid at concentrations of 1 to 10,000 ppm and of UL cellulose, glucose, wheat straw and Chlorella protein at 1 – 50,000 ppm was followed in Chino loam (pH 5.6) and San Jacinto sandy loam (pH 8.0) over a 12-week incubation period. A smaller proportion of the ring C of the benzenoid compounds and glucose was evolved as CO2 from the lower additions than from the higher applications. The range for C loss for ferulic acid was 40 to 79% for the acid soil and 22 to 33% for the alkaline soil as the concentration increased from 1 to 10,000 ppm. Comparable losses for glucose were 47 – 83 and 65 – 81%; for anisic acid 55 – 79 and 49 – 72%; for p-hydroxycinnamic acid 54 – 81 and 21 – 53%; and for benzoic acid 68 – 77 and 50 – 79%. Loss of O14CH3 C of ferulic acid and of wheat straw, cellulose, and protein C was not influenced by concentration. Percentage C loss from ring-14C ferulic and benzoic acids added to initially sterilized and reinoculated acid soil was about 82% and was not influenced by concentration.


NOTES

1 Contribution from Dept. of Soil and Environmental Sciences, University of California, Riverside CA 92521, and Institut für Biochemie des Bodens, FAL, Braunschweig, West Germany.

2 Professor of Soil Science, University of California, Riverside, and Biochemist, Institut für Biochemie des Bodens, Braunschweig, West Germany, respectively. The authors thank J. O. Ervin and B. Johanson for laboratory help, and H. Lemke for assistance with the synthesis of the 14C-labeled compounds.

Received for publication February 13, 1979. Accepted for publication April 16, 1979.







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The Plant Genome
Copyright © 1979 by the Soil Science Society of America.