Literature DB >> 33359700

Successful remediation of soils with mixed contamination of chromium and lindane: Integration of biological and physico-chemical strategies.

Juan Daniel Aparicio1, Rafael G Lacalle2, Unai Artetxe2, Erik Urionabarrenetxea3, José María Becerril2, Marta Alejandra Polti4, Carlos Garbisu5, Manuel Soto3.   

Abstract

Soils contaminated by organic and inorganic pollutants like Cr(VI) and lindane, is currently a main environmental challenge. Biological strategies, such as biostimulation, bioaugmentation, phytoremediation and vermiremediation, and nanoremediation with nanoscale zero-valent iron (nZVI) are promising approaches for polluted soil health recovery. The combination of different remediation strategies might be key to address this problem. For this reason, a greenhouse experiment was performed using soil without or with an organic amendment. Both soils were contaminated with lindane (15 mg kg-1) and Cr(VI) (100 or 300 mg kg-1). After one month of aging, the following treatments were applied: (i) combination of bioaugmentation (actinobacteria), phytoremediation (Brassica napus), and vermiremediation (Eisenia fetida), or (ii) nanoremediation with nZVI, or (iii) combination of biological treatments and nanoremediation. After 60 days, the wellness of plants and earthworms was assessed, also, soil health was evaluated through physico-chemical parameters and biological indicators. Cr(VI) was more toxic and decreased soil health, however, it was reduced to Cr(III) by the amendment and nZVI and, to a lesser extent, by the biological treatment. Lindane was more effectively degraded through bioremediation. In non-polluted soils, nZVI had strong deleterious effects on soil biota when combined with the organic matter, but this effect was reverted in soils with a high concentration of Cr(VI). Therefore, under our experimental conditions bioremediation might be the best for soils with a moderate concentration of Cr(VI) and organic matter. The application of nZVI in soils with a high content of organic matter should be avoided except for soils with very high concentrations of Cr(VI). According to our study, among the treatments tested, the combination of an organic amendment, biological treatment, and nZVI was shown to be the strategy of choice in soils with high concentrations of Cr(VI) and lindane, while for moderate levels of chromium, the organic amendment plus biological treatment is the most profitable treatment.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bioaugmentation; Biostimulation; Ecotoxicity; Phytoremediation; Vermiremediation; nZVI

Year:  2020        PMID: 33359700     DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2020.110666

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Res        ISSN: 0013-9351            Impact factor:   6.498


  2 in total

1.  Remediation of Chromium-Contaminated Soil Based on Bacillus cereus WHX-1 Immobilized on Biochar: Cr(VI) Transformation and Functional Microbial Enrichment.

Authors:  Youyuan Chen; Haixia Wu; Ping Sun; Jiaxin Liu; Shixuan Qiao; Dakuan Zhang; Zhiming Zhang
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2021-03-25       Impact factor: 5.640

2.  Bioaugmentation Technology for Treatment of Toxic and Refractory Organic Waste Water Based on Artificial Intelligence.

Authors:  Jiang Yanbo; Jiang Jianyi; Wei Xiandong; Ling Wei; Jiang Lincheng
Journal:  Front Bioeng Biotechnol       Date:  2021-07-02
  2 in total

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