%0 Journal Article %T The tillage effect on the soil acid and alkaline phosphatase activity %A Lacramioara Oprica %A Zenovia Olteanu %A Simona Isabela Dunca %A Maria-Magdalena Zamfirache %J Analele £¿tiin£¿ifice Ale Universit£¿£¿ii Alexandru Ioan Cuza din Ia£¿i,Sectiunea II A : Genetica si Biologie Moleculara %D 2011 %I Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi %X Phosphatases (acid and alkaline) are important in soils because these extracellular enzymes catalyze the hydrolysis of organic phosphate esters to orthophosphate; thus they form an important link between biologically unavailable and mineral phosphorous. Phosphatase activity is sensitive to environmental perturbations such as organic amendments, tillage, waterlogging, compaction, fertilizer additions and thus it is often used as an environmental indicator of soil quality in riparian ecosystems. The aim of the study was to assess the effect of tillage systems on phosphatases activity in a field experiment carried out in Ez reni farm. The phosphatase activitiy were determined at two depths (7-10 cm and 15-25cm layers) of a chernozem soil submitted to conventional tillage (CT) in a fertilised and unfertilised experiment. Monitoring soil alkaline phosphatase activity showed, generally, the same in fertilized soil profiles collected from both depths; the values being extremely close. In unfertilized soils, alkaline phosphatase activity is different only in soils that were exposed to unconventional work using disc harrows and 30cm tillage. Both works type (no tillage and conventional tillage) cause an intense alkaline phosphatase activity in 7-10 cm soil profile. Acid phosphatase activity is highly fluctuating in both fertilized as well unfertilized soil, this enzyme being influenced by the performed works. %U http://www.gbm.bio.uaic.ro/index.php/gbm/article/view/936