| Literature DB >> 27047723 |
Desta Woldetsadik1, Pay Drechsel2, Bernard Keraita3, Bernd Marschner4, Fisseha Itanna5, Heluf Gebrekidan1.
Abstract
To assess the efficiency of seven treatments including biochars produced from dried faecal matter and manures as stabilizing agents of cadmium (Cd)-spiked soils, lettuce was grown in glasshouse on two contrasting soils. The soils used were moderately fertile silty loam and less fertile sandy loam and the applied treatments were 7 % w/w. The reduction of bioavailable Cd (ammonium nitrate extractable) and its phytoavailability for lettuce were used as assessment criteria in the evaluation of stabilization performance of each treatment. Moreover, the agronomic values of the treatments were also investigated. Ammonium nitrate extraction results indicated that faecal matter biochar, cow manure biochar and lime significantly reduced bioavailable Cd by 84-87, 65-68 and 82-91 %, respectively, as compared to the spiked controls. Unpredictably, coffee husk biochar induced significant increment of Cd in NH4NO3 extracts. The immobilization potential of faecal matter biochar and lime were superior than the other treatments. However, lime and egg shell promoted statistically lower yield and P, K and Zn concentrations response of lettuce plants compared to the biochar treatments. The lowest Cd and highest P tissue concentrations of lettuce plants were induced by faecal matter and cow manure biochar treatments in both soils. Additionally, the greatest Cd phytoavailability reduction for lettuce was induced by poultry litter and cow manure biochars in the silty loam soil. Our results indicate that faecal matter and animal manure biochars have shown great potential to promote Cd immobilization and lettuce growth response in heavily contaminated agricultural fields.Entities:
Keywords: Biochar; Cadmium; Faecal matter; Immobilization; Lettuce; Phytoavailability
Year: 2016 PMID: 27047723 PMCID: PMC4816957 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-2019-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Selected properties of the soils
| Soil | pH (H2O) | EC (dS/m) | Exchangeable cations [cmol(+)/kg] | CEC [cmol(+)/kg] | Total Cd (mg kg−1) | Total C (g kg−1) | Total N (g kg−1) | Particle size | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ca | Mg | K | Na | Al | % Sand | % Silt | % Clay | |||||||
| PKa | 6.71 | 0.024 | 24 | 6.7 | 0.9 | 0.4 | <0.02 | 32.2 | 2.58 | 19 | 1.8 | 19.1 | 73.6 | 7.2 |
| BAa | 6.86 | 0.006 | 4.2 | 1.1 | 0.3 | 0 | <0.02 | 5.83 | 0.3 | 3.2 | 0.4 | 54.1 | 38.2 | 7.5 |
aPK soil: Silty loam soil; BA soil: Sandy loam soil
The influence of stabilization treatments on pH and fresh weight (FW) shoot yield of lettuce grown on PK and BA soils
| Stabilization treatments | PKa soil | BAa soil | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soil pH | Shoot yield (FW) | Soil pH | Shoot yield (FW) | |
| FMB | 7.04 (0.09)eb | 144 (13.0)a | 8.39 (0.09)bc | 91.5 (3.69)a |
| CMB | 7.02 (0.06)e | 84.2(2.65)c | 8.83 (0.25)a | 37.6 (0.40)b |
| PLB | 6.89 (0.04)f | 25.1 (2.78)g | 8.48 (0.20)b | 20.5 (1.87)e |
| PJB | 7.18 (0.10)d | 31.8 (2.40)g | 8.83 (0.39)a | 24.0 (1.72)d |
| CHB | 6.58 (0.03)g | 55.9 (2.19)e | 8.46 (0.14)b | 31.1 (0.81)c |
| ES | 7.74 (0.08)b | 61.0 (1.90)e | 8.88 (0.02)a | 13.2 (1.34)f |
| LI | 7.95 (0.05)a | 43.2 (1.89)f | 9.09 (0.23)a | 10.0 (0.96)g |
| CON+ | 6.51 (0.04)g | 73.1 (3.57)d | 8.11 (0.04)c | 12.7 (0.36)fg |
| CON− | 7.41 (0.02)c | 106 (6.77)b | 8.17 (0.06)bc | 30.8 (2.70)c |
FMB Faecal matter (Faecal cake) biochar, CMB cow manure biochar, PLB poultry litter biochar, PJB Prosopis juliflora pods biochar, CHB Coffee husk biochar, ES Eggshell waste, LI Lime, CON spiked control, CON non-spiked control
aPK soil: Silty loam soil; BA soil: Sandy loam soil
bStandard deviation in parentheses (n = 3), values for each soil with different letter within each column are significantly different (P < 0.05)
Effects of different stabilization treatments on NH4NO3 extractability (mg/kg) of Cd and phytoavailability for lettuce on two spiked soils
| Stabilization treatments | Cd | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PKa soil | BAa soil | |||
| NH4NO3 extractability | Phytoavailability | NH4NO3 extractability | Phytoavailability | |
| FMB | 0.339 (0.023)db | 0.00030 (0.000022)cb | 0.187 (0.009)e | 0.00054 (0.000049)b |
| CMB | 0.696 (0.027)c | 0.000166 (0.000009)d | 0.494 (0.038)d | 0.00032 (0.000026)c |
| PLB | 0.655 (0.016)c | 0.000011 (0.000011)e | 0.206 (0.011)e | 0.00019 (0.000007)d |
| PJB | 0.713 (0.012)c | 0.00020 (0.000004)d | 0.940 (0.067)c | 0.00023 (0.000009)d |
| CHB | 4.67 (0.152)a | 0.00031 (0.000044)c | 2.81 (0.314)a | 0.00052 (0.000030)b |
| ES | 0.261 (0.016)de | 0.00053 (0.000029)b | 0.689 (0.031)d | 0.00029 (0.000011)c |
| LI | 0.198 (0.004)e | 0.00029 (0.000011)c | 0.245 (0.012)e | 0.00014 (0.000006)e |
| CON+ | 2.17 (0.029)b | 0.00090 (0.000032)a | 1.39 (0.073)b | 0.00079 (0.000027)a |
FMB faecal matter (faecal cake) biochar, CMB cow manure biochar, PLB poultry litter biochar, PJB Prosopis juliflora pods biochar, CHB Coffee husk biochar, ES eggshell waste, LI lime, CON spiked control
aPK soil: Silty loam soil; BA soil: Sandy loam soil
bStandard deviation in parentheses (n = 3), values for each soil with different letter within each column are significantly different (P < 0.05)
Shoot dry weight (DW), Cd and selected nutrient tissue concentrations (DW) of lettuce grown on spiked soils under different stabilization treatments
| FMB | CMB | PLB | PJB | CHB | ES | LI | CON+ |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PKa soil | |||||||||
| Biomass (g/pot) | 8.69 (0.25)ab | 5.63 (0.40)b | 1.83 (0.14)f | 2.05 (0.08)f | 3.48 (0.19)d | 3.68 (0.05)d | 2.79 (0.12)e | 4.42 (0.24)c | 0.369 |
| Cd (mg/kg) | 5.50 (0.41)f | 4.65 (0.15)f | 9.40 (0.72)e | 15.6 (0.96)c | 14.2 (1.32)d | 22.7 (0.95)b | 16.4 (0.40)c | 32.2 (0.77)a | 1.37 |
| P (g/kg) | 8.15 (0.39)a | 7.38 (0.30)b | 6.80 (0.29)c | 5.48 (0.21)d | 4.21 (0.05)e | 4.10 (0.17)e | 4.37 (0.20)e | 5.35 (0.18)d | 0.422 |
| Ca (g/kg) | 13.4 (1.18)f | 14.8 (0.38)ef | 20.4 (0.77)c | 16.2 (1.44)d | 15.9 (0.21)de | 24.0 (0.63)a | 22.4 (0.70)b | 19.7 (0.74)c | 1.457 |
| K (g/kg) | 59.6 (1.21)cd | 63.1 (1.50)b | 61.3 (0.88)bc | 68.4 (1.64)a | 59.1 (0.98)cd | 58.7 (1.97)d | 58.0 (2.04)d | 51.6 (1.11)e | 2.555 |
| Mg (g/kg) | 6.83 (0.30)ab | 6.31 (0.35)b | 7.29 (0.47)a | 5.32 (0.14)c | 4.58 (0.15)d | 6.64 (0.38)b | 7.24 (0.31)a | 4.87 (0.18)cd | 0.532 |
| Zn (mg/kg) | 215 (11.7)c | 298 (15.9)b | 505 (5.21)a | 192 (11.1)d | 174 (10.2)e | 61.4 (4.14)f | 51.6 (5.15)f | 58.4 (0.76)f | 16.1 |
| BAa soil | |||||||||
| Biomass (g/pot) | 5.67 (0.26)a | 2.41 (0.04)b | 1.36 (0.05)e | 1.58 (0.09)d | 1.81 (0.02)c | 0.98 (0.04)f | 0.87 (0.03)f | 0.95 (0.03)f | 0.178 |
| Cd (mg/kg) | 14.4 (0.66)e | 20.1 (1.88)d | 21.0 (0.09)d | 22.1 (1.73)cd | 43.4 (2.13)b | 44.6 (3.52)b | 24.1 (0.35)c | 125 (0.33)a | 3.011 |
| P (g/kg) | 5.90 (0.17)b | 6.22 (0.26)a | 4.56 (0.07)c | 3.48 (0.08)d | 2.42 (0.15)e | 1.98 (0.08)f | 1.29 (0.05)g | 1.80 (0.03)f | 0.227 |
| Ca (g/kg) | 7.10 (0.28)f | 3.56 (0.35)g | 8.59 (0.94)e | 7.73 (0.37)ef | 12.1 (0.15)d | 38.8 (1.14)a | 27.7 (0.48)d | 16.7 (0.71)c | 1.109 |
| K (g/kg) | 38.1 (0.74)c | 59.6 (1.02)b | 40.0 (0.76)c | 62.8 (2.20)a | 35.1 (1.58)d | 28.8 (0.64)e | 28.8 (1.21)e | 30.6 (0.81)e | 2.125 |
| Mg (g/kg) | 7.75 (0.37)b | 5.32 (0.36)d | 6.00 (0.26)c | 3.47 (0.28)f | 4.23 (0.28)e | 7.25 (0.10)b | 13.5 (0.61)a | 7.45 (0.17)b | 0.579 |
| Zn (mg/kg) | 50.7 (2.26)c | 54.8 (1.73)c | 60.4 (2.61)c | 95.7 (6.33)b | 175 (0.24)a | 30.5 (2.58)d | 28.0 (1.43)d | 53.7 (2.41)c | 19.99 |
FMB Faecal matter (Faecal cake) biochar, CMB cow manure biochar, PLB poultry litter biochar, PJB Prosopis juliflora pods biochar, CHB Coffee husk biochar, ES Eggshell waste, LI Lime, CON spiked control
aPK soil: Silty loam soil; BA soil: Sandy loam soil
bStandard deviation in parentheses (n = 3), values for each soil with different letter within each row are significantly different (P < 0.05)