Department of Earth and Environmental Science, Montclair State University, Montclair, NJ, USA, 07043.
Department of Biology, Montclair State University, Montclair, NJ, USA, 07043.
Environ Pollut. 2020 Oct;265(Pt A):114801. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2020.114801. Epub 2020 May 12.
Soil anthropogenic contaminants can limit enzymatic nutrient mineralization, either by direct regulation or via impacts on the microbial community, thus affecting plant growth in agricultural and non-agricultural soils. The impact on phosphatase activity of mixing two contaminated, post-industrial rail yard soils was investigated; one was vegetated and had high phosphatase function, the other was barren and had low enzymatic function. The two soils had different abiotic properties, including contaminant load, vegetation cover, soil aggregate size distribution, and phosphatase potential. An experimental gradient was established between the two soils to systematically vary the abiotic properties and microbial community composition of the two soils, creating a gradient of novel ecosystems. The time dependence of extracellular phosphatase activity, soil moisture, and organic matter content was assessed along this gradient in the presence and absence of plants. Initially, mixtures with higher percentages of functional, vegetated soil had higher phosphatase activities. Phosphatase activity remained unchanged through time (65 days) in all soil mixtures in unplanted pots, but it increased in planted pots. For example, in the presence of plants, phosphatase activity increased from 0.6 ± 0.1 to 2.4 ± 0.3 μmol•h•g from day one to day 65 in the 1:1 functional:barren soil mixture. The presence of plants also promoted moisture retention. Inoculation of poorly functioning soil with 10% of the functional soil with its microbial community did not, over 65 days, revitalize the poorly functioning soil. The findings showed that abiotic limitations to enzymatic activity in barren brownfield soils could be mitigated by establishing primary production but not by the addition of enzymatically active microbial communities alone.
土壤人为污染物可以通过直接调节或通过对微生物群落的影响来限制酶促养分矿化,从而影响农业和非农业土壤中的植物生长。本研究调查了混合两种污染的后工业铁轨堆场土壤对磷酸酶活性的影响;一种土壤有植被且磷酸酶功能高,另一种土壤无植被且酶功能低。这两种土壤具有不同的非生物特性,包括污染物负荷、植被覆盖、土壤团聚体大小分布和磷酸酶潜力。在这两种土壤之间建立了一个实验梯度,系统地改变了两种土壤的非生物特性和微生物群落组成,创造了一个新型生态系统的梯度。在有无植物的情况下,沿着这个梯度评估了细胞外磷酸酶活性、土壤水分和有机质含量的时间依赖性。最初,具有较高功能、有植被土壤比例的混合物具有较高的磷酸酶活性。在未种植的花盆中,所有土壤混合物中的磷酸酶活性在 65 天内保持不变,但在种植的花盆中增加。例如,在有植物的情况下,磷酸酶活性从第 1 天的 0.6±0.1μmol•h•g到第 65 天的 2.4±0.3μmol•h•g增加。植物的存在也促进了水分保持。在 65 天内,将功能土壤的 10%与功能较差的土壤一起接种其微生物群落,并没有使功能较差的土壤恢复活力。研究结果表明,在贫瘠的棕色地带土壤中,通过建立初级生产力可以缓解酶活性的非生物限制,但仅添加具有酶活性的微生物群落并不能缓解。