MACRO - The Centre for Macroalgal Resources and Biotechnology, College of Marine and Environmental Science, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia.
MACRO - The Centre for Macroalgal Resources and Biotechnology, College of Marine and Environmental Science, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia.
J Environ Manage. 2015 Jul 1;157:60-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2015.04.016. Epub 2015 Apr 14.
Macroalgae can be grown in industrial waste water to sequester metals and the resulting biomass used for biotechnological applications. We have previously cultivated the freshwater macroalga Oedogonium at a coal-fired power station to treat a metal-contaminated effluent from that facility. We then produced biochar from this biomass and determined the suitability of both the biomass and the biochar for soil amelioration. The dried biomass of Oedogonium cultivated in the waste water contained several elements for which there are terrestrial biosolids criteria (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, Ni, Se and Zn) and leached significant amounts of these elements into solution. Here, we demonstrate that these biomass leachates impair the germination and growth of radishes as a model crop. However, the biochar produced from this same biomass leaches negligible amounts of metal into solution and the leachates support high germination and growth of radishes. Biochar produced at 750 °C leaches the least metal and has the highest recalcitrant C content. When this biochar is added to a low-quality soil it improves the retention of nutrients (N, P, Ca, Mg, K and Mo) from fertilizer in the soil and the growth of radishes by 35-40%. Radishes grown in the soils amended with the biochar have equal or lower metal contents than radishes grown in soil without biochar, but much higher concentrations of essential trace elements (Mo) and macro nutrients (P, K, Ca and Mg). The cultivation of macroalgae is an effective waste water bioremediation technology that also produces biomass that can be used as a feedstock for conversion to biochar for soil amelioration.
藻类可以在工业废水中生长,以隔离金属,而由此产生的生物量可用于生物技术应用。我们之前曾在燃煤发电站培养淡水藻类 Oedogonium,以处理该设施的受金属污染的废水。然后,我们从该生物量中生产生物炭,并确定生物量和生物炭是否适合土壤改良。在废水中培养的 Oedogonium 的干燥生物量含有几种陆地生物固体标准(As、Cd、Cr、Cu、Pb、Ni、Se 和 Zn)的元素,并且大量浸出这些元素到溶液中。在这里,我们证明这些生物量浸出物会损害萝卜作为模式作物的发芽和生长。然而,从同一生物量生产的生物炭几乎不会浸出金属到溶液中,并且浸出液支持萝卜的高发芽和生长。在 750°C 下生产的生物炭浸出的金属最少,具有最高的难降解 C 含量。当将这种生物炭添加到低质量土壤中时,它可以提高土壤中肥料养分(N、P、Ca、Mg、K 和 Mo)的保留率,并使萝卜的生长提高 35-40%。用生物炭改良的土壤中种植的萝卜的金属含量与没有生物炭的土壤中种植的萝卜相同或更低,但必需微量元素(Mo)和大量营养元素(P、K、Ca 和 Mg)的浓度要高得多。藻类的培养是一种有效的废水生物修复技术,它还可以产生生物量,可作为转化为生物炭以进行土壤改良的原料。