the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
Effects of extreme drought on agriculture soil and sustainability of different drought soil
Abstract. Content of microbial biomass carbon was selected as indicator for identifying effects of extreme drought on agriculture soil ecosystem. Through a series of prototype observation experiments, changing tendencies of microbial biomass carbon content and the proportion of microbial biomass carbon in soil organic carbon were identified. The optimum mass water content of soil for microbial biomass carbon was 19.5% and the demarcation point of microbial biomass carbon to drought was 14.3%, which could be used to demonstrate alters and degradation of soil ecosystem as well as the irrigation requirement of crops. We evaluated sustainability of different drought soil ecosystems after experiencing rainstorm with rehabilitation. The results suggested that soil ecosystem which was interfered by moderate drought could recover and its tolerance to drought was improved, as well as its function and activity. Soil ecosystem could barely recover from severe drought and could not adapt to severe drought stress. Soil ecosystem could not restore from extreme drought within a few days, the function and structure were damaged. We came to the conclusion that mass water content of soil should kept above 10% to avoid destroying function and structure while soil ecosystem would better be watered when mass water content was lower than 14.3% in order to maintain high productivity.
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RC C27: 'Review of “Effects of extreme drought on agriculture soil and sustainability of different drought soil” by Geng et al., HESSD, 11, 1-29, 2014', Anonymous Referee #1, 24 Jan 2014
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AC C172: 'a point to point response to hessd-11-C27-2014', S.M. Geng, 25 Feb 2014
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AC C172: 'a point to point response to hessd-11-C27-2014', S.M. Geng, 25 Feb 2014
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RC C60: 'Interesting data, poor presentation', Anonymous Referee #2, 04 Feb 2014
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AC C178: 'a point to point response to hessd-11-C60-2014', S.M. Geng, 25 Feb 2014
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AC C178: 'a point to point response to hessd-11-C60-2014', S.M. Geng, 25 Feb 2014


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RC C27: 'Review of “Effects of extreme drought on agriculture soil and sustainability of different drought soil” by Geng et al., HESSD, 11, 1-29, 2014', Anonymous Referee #1, 24 Jan 2014
-
AC C172: 'a point to point response to hessd-11-C27-2014', S.M. Geng, 25 Feb 2014
-
AC C172: 'a point to point response to hessd-11-C27-2014', S.M. Geng, 25 Feb 2014
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RC C60: 'Interesting data, poor presentation', Anonymous Referee #2, 04 Feb 2014
-
AC C178: 'a point to point response to hessd-11-C60-2014', S.M. Geng, 25 Feb 2014
-
AC C178: 'a point to point response to hessd-11-C60-2014', S.M. Geng, 25 Feb 2014
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Cited
4 citations as recorded by crossref.
- Flooding and prolonged drought have differential legacy impacts on soil nitrogen cycling, microbial communities and plant productivity L. Nguyen et al. 10.1007/s11104-018-3774-7
- Metals discharged during different flow conditions from a mixed agricultural‐forest catchment (NW Spain) F. Soto‐Varela et al. 10.1002/hyp.10282
- Impacts of biostimulants on crop yield and biological activity under drought conditions J. Wadduwage et al. 10.1002/sae2.12093
- Short-Term Effects of Experimental Warming and Precipitation Manipulation on Soil Microbial Biomass C and N, Community Substrate Utilization Patterns and Community Composition G. LI et al. 10.1016/S1002-0160(17)60408-9