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Wei Wang, Haojie Shi, Xingang Liu*, Liangang Mao, Lan Zhang, Lizhen Zhu, Chi Wu,Wenzhu Wu*, Enhanced remediation of acetochlor-contaminated soils using phosphate-modified biochar: Impacts on environmental fate, microbial communities, and plant health.

文章来源:Sci Total Environ        点击数: 次      发布时间:2025-03-06

Sci Total Environ, 2024, https:// doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.177359

 

Abstract

Given that acetochlor (ACT) persists in soil for extended periods, disrupting microbial community structure and causing phytotoxicity to sensitive crops, this study investigated the potential of phosphate-modified biochar (PBC-800) to remediate ACT-contaminated soil. Incorporating 0.5 % PBC-800 into fluvo-aquic, red, and black soils increased their adsorption capacities by 80.4 mg g-1, 76.6 mg g-1, and 76.0 mg g-1, respectively. Even after six months of aging, the Kf values remained 1.6 to 5.1 times higher than in untreated soils. PBC-800 also accelerated ACT degradation across all three soil types, reducing residual ACT levels by 34.3 % to 76.4 % after 60 days, and shortening the degradation half-life by 5 to 7 days. High-throughput sequencing revealed that ACT reduced soil microbial diversity and disrupted community structure, while 0.5 % PBC-800 amendments promoted the growth of degradation-capable genera such as Rhodococcus, Lysobacter, and Gemmatimonas, enhancing microbial ecosystem stability. Furthermore, the amendment of soil with 0.5 % PBC-800 reduced ACT residue concentrations in maize and soybeans by 76.5 % to 82.9 %, and restored plant biomass, leaf chlorophyll content, and mesophyll cell ultrastructure to levels comparable to the control. Therefore, amending ACT-contaminated soil with PBC-800 mitigates ecological and environmental risks, boosts microbial activity, and safeguards plant health.

 

Sci Total Environ, IF=8.2

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39500462/