ELSEVIER Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 51 (1994) 145-160
Agriculture
Ecosystems &
Environment
The ecology of bacterivorous protozoans and nematodes in arable
soil 1
L.A. Bouwman*, K.B. Zwart
DLO Research Institute for Agrobiology and Soil Fertility, P.O. Box 129, 9750 AC Haren, Netherlands
Accepted 11 August 1993
Abstract
Protozoans and nematodes were studied as part of extensive investigations into the functioning of ecosystems
in arable soil under low and high input management regimes.
Bacterial-feeding soil protozoans and nematodes largely share the same niche in the soil ecosystem, the water
film surrounding soil particles and filling soil pores. This paper presents general information on the ecology of
protozoans and nematodes combined with various results from field observations and laboratory experiments.
Biomass (B) dynamics of protozoans and nematodes in the arable fields of the Lovinkhoeve Experimental Farm
and their estimated annual production rates (P) under winter wheat in 1990 amounted on average to 16 kg C
ha -I and 105 kg C ha -I respectively (0-25 cm) for protozoans and to 0.330 kg C ha -1 and 11.6 kg C ha -1 for
bacterivorous and omnivorous nematodes.
Experiments are described on the dependence of protozoans and nematodes on soil moisture. It was demon-
strated that considerable differences exist with respect to drought tolerance among different protozoan and ne-
matode taxa: taxa such as the flagellate Spumella sp. and the bacterivorous Rhabditidae (Nematoda) proved to
be more vulnerable to drought than the flagellate Cercomonas sp. and the bacterivorous Cephalobidae (Nematoda).
It is assumed that in the arable fields of the Lovinkhoeve farm, growth-limiting and non-limiting conditions for
protozoans alternate throughout the year and this may also hold for their food dependence (bacteria). For bacter-
ivorous nematodes it is assumed that Rhabditidae depend on patchily distributed, temporally high densities of
bacteria and have to deal more frequently with food densities below their threshold for reproduction than the
Cephalobidae. In microcosm experiments with sterilised soil amended with crop residues, and reinoculated selec-
tively with microorganisms, protozoans, bacterivorous nematodes and a nematophagous fungus, it was shown that
protozoans and nematodes substantially affected the pattern of C and N mineralisation and that effects on C and
N did not always run in parallel.
Keywords: Carbon mineralization; Nematode; Nitrogen mineralization; Protozoa; Soil moisture
1. Introduction
Undesirable effects of high-input farming SyS-
*Corresponding author.
~Communication No. 58 of the Dutch Programme on Soil
Ecology of Arable Farming Systems.
tems advanced comparative studies on agroecol-
ogy in fields under conventional and integrated
management. Increased understanding of eco-
logical interactions in the soil is considered to be
a prerequisite for a decrease in unacceptably high
inputs of mineral fertilisers and pesticides. E1 Titi
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