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Amendment-driven soil health restoration through soil pH and microbial robustness in a Cd/Cu-combined acidic soil: A ten-year in-situ field experiment
Ist Teil von
Journal of hazardous materials, 2024-03, Vol.465, p.133109, Article 133109
Ort / Verlag
Netherlands: Elsevier B.V
Erscheinungsjahr
2024
Quelle
ScienceDirect Pay Per View(PPV) Titles
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Soil health arguably depends on biodiversity and has received wide attention in heavy-metal (HM) contaminated farmland remediation in recent years. However, long-term effects and mechanisms of soil amendment remain poorly understood with respect to soil microbal community. In this in-situ field study, four soil amendments (attapulgite-At, apatite-Ap, montmorillonite-M, lime-L) at three rates were applied once only for ten years in a cadmium (Cd)–copper (Cu) contaminated paddy soil deprecated for over five years. Results showed that after ten years and in compared with CK (no amendment), total Cd concentration and its risk in plot soils were not altered by amendments (p > 0.05), but total Cu concentration and its risk were significantly increased by both Ap and L, especially the former, rather than At and M (p < 0.05), through increased soil pH and enhanced bacterial alpha diversity as well as plant community. Soil microbial communities were more affected by amendment type (30%) than dosage (11%), microbial network characteristics were dominated by rare taxa, and soil multifunctionality was improved in Ap- and L-amended soils. A structural equation model (SEM) indicated that 57.3% of soil multifunctionality variances were accounted for by soil pH (+0.696) and microbial network robustness (−0.301). Moreover, microbial robustness could be potentially used as an indicator of soil multifunctionality, and Ap could be optimized to improve soil health in combined with biomass removal. These findings would advance the understanding of soil microbial roles, especially its network robustness, on soil multifunctionality for the remediation of metal contaminated soils and metal control management strategies in acidic soils.
Farmland soil contamination by heavy metals (HMs) has been becoming a serious global environmental challenge. However, most studies have been conducted over the short term, leading to a gap in the long-term remediation efficiency and ecological benefits of soil amendments. For the successful deployment of immobilization technologies, it is critical to understand the long-term stability of the immobilized HMs and soil health. Our study, to the best of our knowlege, is the first to state the long-term effects and mechanisms of soil amendments on soil health and optimize an effective and eco-friendly amendment for long-term Cd/Cu immobilization.
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•Four soil amendments were applied with a one-off and post ten years.•Soil microbial community and bacteria alpha diversity were changed significantly.•Microbial network was dominated by rare taxa under apatite- and lime-amended soils.•Soil multifunctionality were driven by soil pH and microbial network robustness.•Apatite especial with high dosages was optimized for improving soil multifunctionality.