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Influence of an iron-rich amendment on chemical lability and plant (Raphanus sativus L.) availability of two metallic elements (As and Pb) on mine-impacted agricultural soils

Authors
Kim, JuheeKim, Yong-SeongHyun, SeunghunMoon, Deok HyunChang, Jun Young
Issue Date
Oct-2016
Publisher
SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
Keywords
Contaminated soils; Amendment; Chemical lability; Phytoavailability of As and Pb; Radish (R. sativus)
Citation
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, v.23, no.20, pp.20739 - 20748
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume
23
Number
20
Start Page
20739
End Page
20748
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/87335
DOI
10.1007/s11356-016-7278-9
ISSN
0944-1344
Abstract
Variation of the chemical extractability and phytoavailability of two metallic elements (e.g., As and Pb) on amendment-treated soils was investigated. Four mine-impacted agricultural soils contaminated with both As (174-491 mg kg(-1)) and Pb (116-357 mg kg(-1)) were amended with an iron-rich sludge at the rate of 5 % (w/w). After a 4-, 8-, and 16-week incubation, the extractability of metallic elements was assessed by sequential extraction procedure (SEP; F1-F5). The control without amendment was also run. In amended soils, the labile element mass (i.e., F1 + F2) promptly decreased (15-48 % of As and 5-10 % of Pb) in 4 weeks, but the decrement was continued over 16 weeks up to 70 and 28 % for As and Pb, respectively. The labile mass decrement was quantitatively corresponded with the increment of F3 (bound to amorphous metal oxides). In plant test assessed by radish (Raphanus sativus) grown on the 16-week soils, up to 57 % of As and 28 % of Pb accumulation was suppressed and 10-43 % of growth (i.e., shoot/root elongation and fresh weight) was improved. For both the control and amended soils, element uptake by plant was well correlated with their labile soil concentrations (r (2) = 0.799 and 0.499 for As and Pb, respectively). The results confirmed that the iron-rich material can effectively suppress element uptake during R. sativus seedling growth, most likely due to the chemical stabilization of metallic elements in growth medium.
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