1. A field trial for remediation of multi-metal contaminated soils using the combination of fly ash stabilization and Zanthoxylumbungeanum- Lolium perenne intercropping system.
- Author
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Zhang, Han, Lv, Xiaoyong, Yang, Zhaowen, Li, Qian, Wang, Ping, Zhang, Shuqiang, Xu, Yaqiong, Wang, Xuejia, Ali, Esmat F., Hooda, Peter S., Lee, Sang Soo, Li, Ronghua, Shaheen, Sabry M., and Zhang, Zengqiang
- Subjects
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SOIL remediation , *RYEGRASSES , *FLY ash , *LOLIUM perenne , *CATCH crops , *FOOD crops , *FIELD research - Abstract
In situ stabilization and phytoextraction are considered as two convenient and effective technologies for the remediation of toxic elements (TEs) in soils. However, the effectiveness of these two remediation technologies together on the bioavailability and phytoextraction of TEs in field trials has not been explored yet. Specifically, the remediation potential of fly ash (FA; as stabilizing agent) and ryegrass (as a TE accumulator) intercropped with a target crop for soil polluted with multiple TEs has not been investigated yet, particularly in long-term field trials. Therefore, in this study, a six-month combined remediation field experiment of FA stabilization and/or ryegrass intercropping (IR) was carried out on the farmland soils contaminated with As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Ni, Pb and Zn where Zanthoxylum bungeanum (ZB) trees as native crops were grown for years. The treatments include soil cultivated alone with ZB untreated- (control) and treated-with FA (FA), produced by burning lignite in Shaanxi Datong power plant, China, soil cultivated with ZB and ryegrass untreated- (IR) and treated-with FA (FA + IR). This was underpinned by a large-scale survey in Daiziying (China), which showed that the topsoils were polluted by Cd, Cu, Hg and Pb, and that Hg and Pb contents in the Zanthoxylum bungeanum fruits exceeded their allowable limits. The TEs contents in the studied FA were lower than their total element contents in the soil. The DTPA-extractable TEs contents of the remediation modes were as follows: FA < FA + IR < IR < control. Notably, TEs contents in the ZB fruits were lowest under the FA + IR treatment, which were decreased by 27.6% for As, 42.3% for Cd, 16.7% for Cr, 30.5% for Cu, 23.1% for Hg, 15.5% for Ni, 33.2% for Pb and 38.1% for Zn compared with the control treatment. Whereas the FA + IR treatment enhanced TEs contents in ryegrass shoots and roots, and the TEs contents in ryegrass shoots were below their regulatory limits for fodder crops. The findings confirmed that the combined remediation strategy, i.e., FA (with low content of TEs) stabilization effect and intercropping of ZB (target crop) and ryegrass (accumulating plant) could provide a prospective approach to produce target plants within safe TEs thresholds with greater economic benefits, while remediating soils polluted with multiple TEs and mitigating the potential ecological and human health risk. Those results are of great applicable concern. [Display omitted] • Combined soil remediation by fly ash (FA) and intercropping (IR) is proposed. • Zanthoxylum Bungeanum used as a target crop and ryegrass as a hyperaccumulator. • FA + IR decreased the bioavailability of soil toxic elements (TEs) in soil. • TEs content was reduced in Zanthoxylum Bungeanum fruit while increased in ryegrass. • Passivation of FA and competition of ryegrass made soils and crops safe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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