Takuya Marumoto
Yamaguchi University
37 Papers
499 Citations
Takuya Marumoto is an academic researcher from Yamaguchi University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mineralization (soil science) & Soil organic matter. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 36 publications.
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Papers
Inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi: the status quo in Japan and the future prospects
Masanori Saito,Takuya Marumoto +1 more
TL;DR: Approaches include use of chemicals to increase spore germination and colonization and soil application of charcoal to provide a microhabitat for AM fungi to colonize and survive.
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Mineralization of C and N from microbial biomass in paddy soil
TL;DR: In this paper, the contribution of microbial biomass to the pool of mobile plant nutrients in paddy soil was investigated, and it was observed that the C to N ratio mineralized from freshly killed biomass by chloroform fumigation of paddy soils was nearly 10 under aerobic conditions.
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Estimation of microbial biomass carbon and nitrogen in Bangladesh soils
TL;DR: In order to estimate the microbial biomass content and to quantify the amount of available plant nutrients derived from microbial biomass in Bangladesh soils, biomass-C, -N, and available-N contents using samples from 8 soils were measured by applying the chloroform fumigation and drying-rewetting methods, respectively.
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Drying effect on mineralizations of microbial cells and their cell walls in soil and contribution of microbial cell walls as a source of decomposable soil organic matter due to drying
TL;DR: In this article, the mineralization of several kinds of microbial cells added to soil were accelerated considerably by the drying effect, and they were roughly divided by mechanical procedure into two parts, i.e., cytoplasmic and cell wall substances, and separately added to the soil with or without drying previously.
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Relationship between microbial biomass and extractable organic carbon content in volcanic and non-volcanic ash soil
TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between the amount of microbial biomass and several fractions of soil organic C was investigated using five volcanic ash and five non-volcanic ash soils from Japan, where a portion of each soil sample was amended with plant debris.
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