生物炭
硝化作用
肥料
化学
环境化学
土壤pH值
土壤水分
铵
稻草
农学
环境科学
氮气
土壤科学
无机化学
热解
有机化学
生物
作者
Min Wang,Min Yang,Tingting Fan,Dengjun Wang,Jianzhou He,Haotian Wu,Dunfeng Si,Mei Wang,Song Wu,Dongmei Zhou
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161506
摘要
The intensive mining activities to extract rare earth elements from ion-adsorption rare earth deposits have introduced massive amounts of ammonium into the tailing soils in southern China. Compared to the ubiquitous soil nitrification in cropland, forest, and grassland soils, however, there is no feasible strategy to alleviate the ammonium contamination in tailing soil. Herein, the feasibility to remove ammonium by adding ammonium adsorbents (e.g., biochar, activated carbon, and zeolite), alkaline materials, and organic fertilizer to the rare earth mining soil was explored. The amendment of rice straw biochar, activated carbon, or zeolite in combination with CaCO3 and organic fertilizer showed no significant effect on ammonium removal due to their limited capacity to elevate soil pH. However, the co-application of peanut straw biochar (PSBC), CaCO3, and organic fertilizer activated both the ammonia volatilization and soil nitrification processes. Specifically, the three components functioned as follows: organic fertilizer supplied active ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB); PSBC stimulated AOB proliferation by elevating soil pH above 7.75; CaCO3 ameliorated soil acidity and reduced the lag time for activating soil nitrification. The soil ammonium removal and nitrate accumulation rates were positively correlated to the acid neutralization capacity of PSBC prepared at 400 °C-800 °C. The qPCR and microbial community analysis results indicated that Nitrosomonas europaea was the dominant AOB that was responsible for enhanced soil nitrification. Our findings pave the way for developing cost-effective strategies to remediate ammonium contamination in rare earth mining soils.
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