Department of Soil Science and Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Shahrekord, University, P.O.Box 115, Shahrekord, Iran.
Department of Soil Science and Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Shahrekord, University, P.O.Box 115, Shahrekord, Iran.
J Environ Manage. 2019 Oct 1;247:780-789. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.06.130. Epub 2019 Jul 9.
Micro- and macro-organisms are key components of sustainable soil-plant systems; and are involved in plant growth stimulation and accumulation of heavy metals in the plant, with great contribution to phytoremediation of heavy metal-contaminated soils. However, the combined effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) and earthworms on plant growth and metal uptake is not yet clear. The main objective of this study was to examine the combined influences of these soil organisms on the growth and metal uptake by a native plant species (Stachys inflata), and subsequently on potential phytoremediation in a soil highly polluted with Pb/Zn mining activities. Metal tolerant AMF, PGPR and earthworms were used either alone or in combination in a factorial pot experiment under greenhouse conditions for 4 months. Inoculation of AMF, PGPR and earthworm led to an increase of soil Pb/Zn availability with the greatest Zn availability (about 2 times) with triple inoculation of all the organisms and the highest Pb availability (about 3 times) with co-inoculation of PGPR and earthworms. Triple inoculation of soil organisms increased the total plant biomass 3 times, total Pb uptake 6 times and total Zn uptake 5 times as compared with the uninoculated plants. The growth-stimulating effect of combined soil organisms was much greater than that of individual or dually-inoculated organisms. These results showed that it is possible to use the combination of metal-tolerant soil organisms as a potential bioaugmentation tool to accelerate metal phytoremediation rate in calcareous soils polluted by Pb/Zn mining activity under arid conditions. This could occur as a consequence of the synergistic effects of AMF, PGPR and earthworms on metal availability in the soil, S. inflata growth, metal tolerance and uptake. However, it would practically require more than hundreds of cropping cycles (360 for Pb and 250 for Zn) to achieve metal maximum permissible limits under the conditions of this pot experiment.
微生物和宏观生物是可持续土壤-植物系统的关键组成部分;它们参与植物生长的刺激和重金属在植物中的积累,对重金属污染土壤的植物修复做出了巨大贡献。然而,丛枝菌根真菌(AMF)、植物促生根际细菌(PGPR)和蚯蚓对植物生长和金属吸收的综合影响尚不清楚。本研究的主要目的是研究这些土壤生物对一种本地植物物种(节节麦)生长和金属吸收的综合影响,随后在受 Pb/Zn 采矿活动高度污染的土壤中进行潜在的植物修复。在温室条件下进行了 4 个月的盆栽实验,采用单独或组合使用耐金属 AMF、PGPR 和蚯蚓。接种 AMF、PGPR 和蚯蚓增加了土壤中 Pb/Zn 的有效性,其中三重接种所有生物时 Zn 的有效性最高(约增加 2 倍),PGPR 和蚯蚓共同接种时 Pb 的有效性最高(约增加 3 倍)。与未接种的植物相比,三重接种土壤生物使植物总生物量增加了 3 倍,总 Pb 吸收增加了 6 倍,总 Zn 吸收增加了 5 倍。与单独或双重接种的生物相比,组合土壤生物的刺激生长效果要强得多。这些结果表明,在干旱条件下,使用耐金属土壤生物的组合作为一种潜在的生物强化工具来加速钙质土壤中 Pb/Zn 采矿活动污染的金属植物修复是可行的。这可能是由于 AMF、PGPR 和蚯蚓对土壤中金属有效性、节节麦生长、金属耐受性和吸收的协同作用。然而,在这种盆栽实验条件下,要达到金属最大允许限度,实际上需要超过数百个种植周期(Pb 为 360 个,Zn 为 250 个)。