MACRO - the Centre for Macroalgal Resources and Biotechnology, College of Marine and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia.
MACRO - the Centre for Macroalgal Resources and Biotechnology, College of Marine and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia.
J Environ Manage. 2015 Sep 15;161:173-180. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2015.07.002. Epub 2015 Jul 13.
In most countries the mining industry is required to rehabilitate disturbed land with native vegetation. A typical approach is to stockpile soils during mining and then use this soil to recreate landforms after mining. Soil that has been stockpiled for an extended period typically contains little or no organic matter and nutrient, making soil rehabilitation a slow and difficult process. Here, we take freshwater macroalgae (Oedogonium) cultivated in waste water at a coal-fired power station and use it as a feedstock for the production of biochar, then use this biochar to enhance the rehabilitation of two types of stockpiled soil - a ferrosol and a sodosol - from the adjacent coal mine. While the biomass had relatively high concentrations of some metals, due to its cultivation in waste water, the resulting biochar did not leach metals into the pore water of soil-biochar mixtures. The biochar did, however, contribute essential trace elements (particularly K) to soil pore water. The biochar had very strong positive effects on the establishment and growth of a native plant (Kangaroo grass, Themeda australis) in both of the soils. The addition of the algal biochar to both soils at 10 t ha(-1) reduced the time to germination by the grass and increased the growth and production of plant biomass. Somewhat surprisingly, there was no beneficial effect of a higher application rate (25 t ha(-1)) of the biochar in the ferrosol, which highlights the importance of matching biochar application rates to the requirements of different types of soil. Nevertheless, we demonstrate that algal biochar can be produced from biomass cultivated in waste water and used at low application rates to improve the rehabilitation of a variety of soils typical of coal mines. This novel process links biomass production in waste water to end use of the biomass in land rehabilitation, simultaneously addressing two environmental issues associated with coal-mining and processing.
在大多数国家,采矿业都被要求用原生植被来修复受干扰的土地。一种典型的方法是在采矿过程中储存土壤,然后在采矿后用这些土壤来重塑地形。长期储存的土壤通常几乎不含有机物和养分,这使得土壤修复过程缓慢而困难。在这里,我们利用在燃煤电厂的废水里培养的淡水大型藻类(Oedogonium)作为原料,生产生物炭,然后用这种生物炭来增强两种来自附近煤矿的储存土壤——铁铝土和草甸土的修复效果。虽然生物质含有相对较高浓度的一些金属,但由于它是在废水中培养的,因此生物炭不会将金属浸滤到土壤-生物炭混合物的孔隙水中。然而,生物炭确实为土壤孔隙水提供了必需的微量元素(特别是 K)。生物炭对两种土壤中一种本地植物(袋鼠草,Themeda australis)的建立和生长有非常积极的影响。在两种土壤中,以 10 吨/公顷(t/ha)的比例添加藻类生物炭,可缩短草的发芽时间,并增加植物生物量的生长和产量。有点令人惊讶的是,在铁铝土中,更高(25 吨/公顷)的生物炭添加率并没有产生有益的效果,这突出了匹配生物炭施加率与不同类型土壤需求的重要性。尽管如此,我们证明了可以从废水中培养的生物质中生产藻类生物炭,并以低应用率用于改善各种煤矿土壤的修复。这种新方法将废水生物量生产与生物量在土地修复中的最终用途联系起来,同时解决了与采煤和加工相关的两个环境问题。