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Contribution of bacterial cell nitrogen to soil humic fractions
Authors:R Knowles  L Barro
Institution:(1) Department of Microbiology, Macdonald Campus of McGill University, H9X lCO Ste Anne de Bellevue, Qué., Canada
Abstract:Summary Living cells ofSerratia marcescens, uniformly labelled with15N, were added to samples of maple (Acer saccharum) and black spruce (Picea mariana) forest soils. After different periods of incubation from zero time to 100 days, the soils were subjected to alkali-acid and phenol extraction to provide humic acid, fulvic acid, humin and lsquohumoproteinrsquo fractions. Significant amounts of the cell nitrogen were recovered in the humic and fulvic acids immediately after addition. After incubation, less cell, nitrogen appeared in the humic acid and more in the fulvic acid. The amount of cell nitrogen recovered in the humin fraction increased with incubation. Roughly 5 to 10 per cent of the added cell nitrogen was found as amino acid nitrogen from humoprotein in a phenol extract of the humic acid. The data are consistent with the occurrence of co-precipitation of biologically labile biomass nitrogen compounds with humic polymers during the alkaline extraction procedure involved in the humic-fulvic fractionation.
Keywords:Fulvic acid  Humic acid  Humoprotein  15N-bacterial cells  Organic matter fractionation  Serratia marcescens
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