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  • Key words Earthworms  (1)
  • cereal-legume intercropping  (1)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words Earthworms ; Stable isotopes ; Mucus ; Carbon turnover ; Diet
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We used natural abundance stable isotope techniques to estimate carbon and nitrogen turnover rates in body tissue and mucus of earthworms. Isotope ratios of carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) were monitored simultaneously in body tissue and mucus for up to 101 days in feeding or fasting Lumbricus festivus kept in an artificial substrate. When the diet of the earthworms was switched from clover (C3 plant, legume) to maize (C4, non-legume), the new dietary δ13C signature manifested itself much more rapidly in the mucus than in the body tissue of the animals, causing a δ13C shift of about 4‰ in mucus and 1‰ in tissue after 13.5 days. Turnover of earthworm body tissue carbon, unlike that of mucus carbon, was described adequately by an exponential, single-pool model. Nitrogen turnover could not be assessed because the δ15N difference between sources was too small. Fasting for 56 days did not result in the expected whole-body 15N or 13C enrichment, but it caused a significant decrease in mucus and tissue C:N ratios and in the ratio (mucus C:N ratio):(tissue C:N ratio). We conclude that the separate analysis of body tissue and mucus has great potential for studying the ecophysiology, feeding ecology and role in elemental cycling of earthworms and other invertebrates.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: cereal-legume intercropping ; crop balance ; 15N stable isotope tracer ; Lumbricidae ; nitrogen transfer among plants ; root feeding
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The effects of earthworms (Lumbricidae) on plant biomass production and N allocation in model intercropping systems of winter wheat and white clover were evaluated in two pot experiments. Wheat and wheat-clover mixtures were grown in a low-organic loam soil, earthworms were added at densities comparable to field population densities and the experiments were terminated 48 and 17 d after earthworm introductions. In both experiments, earthworms significantly increased the biomass and N uptake of wheat while they had generally no effects on clover. As a result, earthworm activity increased the proportion of wheat biomass in the total plant biomass of the mixture. Nitrogen budgets of the experiment lasting 48 d indicated that additional N in the system made available by earthworm activity was primarily taken up by the wheat. Earthworms also affected intra-plant N allocation in wheat which had significantly higher shoot:root N ratios when earthworms were present. When clover was labelled with 15N in the experiment which lasted 17 d, endogeic earthworms significantly reduced the amounts of 15N excess transferred from living or decomposing clover roots to accompanying wheat plants. Earthworms assimilated small quantities of 15N tracer from decomposing clover roots but not from living clover roots. The results of these model experiments suggest that earthworms can affect the balance between intercropped cereals and legumes by altering intra- and inter-plant N allocation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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