Publications by authors named "Longhua Wu"

Article Synopsis
  • AMF (arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi) are important in managing heavy metal contamination in soil, particularly in the context of cadmium (Cd) pollution.
  • The study tested the effects of maintaining static versus rotating conditions on AMF growth and found that rotating the soil reduced beneficial substances, hindered maize growth, and increased Cd absorption by the plants.
  • Results showed that AMF help limit Cd movement in soil by altering its chemical forms and decreasing overall availability, thus protecting crops from heavy metal uptake.
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Soil contamination by multiple metals is a significant concern due to the interlinked mobilization processes. The challenges in comprehending this issue arise from the poorly characterized interaction among different metals and the complexities introduced by spatial and temporal heterogeneity in soil systems. We delved into these complexities by incubating size-fractionated paddy soils under both anaerobic and aerobic conditions, utilizing a combination of techniques for aqueous and colloidal analysis.

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Cadmium (Cd) is a prominent heavy metal pollutant that inhibits plant growth and poses risks to human health. Sedum plumbizincicola, as a Cd/Zn/Pb hyperaccumulator species, exhibits robust resistance to heavy metals and effective enrichment capacities. In our previous study, overexpressing SpbZIP60 in Arabidopsis enhanced Cd tolerance; however, the underlying the molecular mechanism remains to be elucidated.

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Coix lacryma-jobi L. is a traditional medicinal plant in east Asia and is an important crop in Guizhou province, southwest China, where there are elevated levels of soil mercury and arsenic (As). Exposure to multiple potentially toxic elements (PTEs) may affect plant accumulation of metal(loid)s and food safety in regions with high geological metal concentrations.

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To achieve food security in a contaminated agricultural land, the remediation areas usually need more samples to obtain accurate contamination information and implement appropriate measures. In this study, we propose an optimal encryption sampling design to instead of the detailed survey, which is determined by the variation of heavy metals and the technology capability of remediation, to guide soil sampling for accurately remediation in the potential remediation-effective areas (PRA). The coefficient of screening variation threshold (CSVT), considering spatial variation, technology capacity and acceptable error of sampling, together with the spatial cyclic statistics method of neighbourhood analysis, is introduced to identify and delineate the PRA.

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is a renowned hyperaccumulator of cadmium (Cd), possesses significant potential for eco-friendly phytoremediation of soil contaminated with Cd. Nevertheless, comprehension of the mechanisms underpinning its Cd stress response remains constrained, primarily due to the absence of a comprehensive genome sequence and an established genetic transformation system. In this study, we successfully identified a novel protein that specifically responds to Cd stress through early comparative iTRAQ proteome and transcriptome analyses under Cd stress conditions.

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Soil thallium (Tl) contamination is of major public concern but little is known about soil Tl ecological toxicity or potential ecological remediation strategies. Here, two soil animal species with different ecological niches, Folsomia candida and Enchytraeus crypticus, were used to test Tl toxicity and modification by exogenous organic materials (i.e.

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Article Synopsis
  • Mining areas with naturally and anthropogenically exposed surrounding rocks (NESRs and AESRs) can release potentially toxic elements (PTEs), particularly thallium (Tl) and arsenic (As), which has been largely ignored in the past.
  • Researchers found that AESRs can release significantly higher percentages of Tl (10.4%) and As (32.5%) compared to NESRs, with long-term risks associated with the oxidation of minerals through multiple leaching tests.
  • The study emphasizes the role of nanoparticles and changes in mineral composition in facilitating the transport of Tl and As, underscoring the need to manage PTEs in mining regions effectively.
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Cadmium (Cd) is a heavy metal pollutant mainly originating from the discharge of industrial sewage, irrigation with contaminated water, and the use of fertilizers. The phytoremediation of Cd polluted soil depends on the identification of the associated genes in hyperaccumulators. Here, a novel Cd tolerance gene (SpCTP3) was identified in hyperaccumulator Sedum plumbizincicola.

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East Yunnan province in southwest China is a region with elevated natural abundance (high geological background levels) of Cd due to high metal (loid) contents in the soils. Enzyme activities are useful indicators of metal (loid) toxicity in contaminated soils and whether Cd inhibits enzyme activities in paddy soils in high geological background areas is of considerable public concern. A pot experiment combined with field investigation was conducted to assess the effects of Cd on six soil enzymes that are essential to the cycling of C, N, and P in soils.

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Accurate prediction of cadmium (Cd) ecotoxicity to and accumulation in soil biota is important in soil health. However, very limited information on Cd ecotoxicity on naturally contaminated soils. Herein, we investigated soil Cd ecotoxicity using Folsomia candida, a standard single-species test animal, in 28 naturally Cd-contaminated soils, and the back-propagation neural network (BPNN) model was used to predict Cd ecotoxicity to and accumulation in F.

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Background And Aims: Kalanchoideae is one of three subfamilies within Crassulaceae and contains four genera. Despite previous efforts, the phylogeny of Kalanchoideae remains inadequately resolved with persistent issues including low support, unstructured topologies and polytomies. This study aimed to address two central objectives: (1) resolving the pending phylogenetic questions within Kalanchoideae by using organelle-scale 'barcodes' (plastomes) and nuclear data; and (2) investigating interspecific diversity patterns among Kalanchoideae plastomes.

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Water-dispersible colloids (WDCs) are vital for trace element migration, but there is limited information about the abundance, size distribution and elemental composition of WDC-bound thallium (Tl) and arsenic (As) in mining-contaminated soils and sediments solutions. Here, we investigated the potential mobilization of WDC-bound Tl and As in soils and sediments in a typical Tl/As-contaminated area. Ultrafiltration results revealed on average > 60% of Tl and As in soil solution (< 220 nm) coexisted in colloidal form whereas Tl and As in sediment solution primarily existed in the truly dissolved state (< 10 kDa) due to increased acidity.

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The root-associated microbiome assembly substantially promotes (hyper)accumulator plant growth and metal accumulation and is influenced by multiple factors, especially host species and environmental stress. Athyrium wardii (Hook.) is a phytostabilizer that grows in lead (Pb)-zinc (Zn) mine tailings and shows high root Pb accumulation.

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The release behaviors of potentially toxic elements (PTEs) associated with water-dispersible colloids (WDCs) in contaminated soils are of considerable public concern. However, little information is available on the size distribution and elemental composition of WDCs and their effects on the release of PTEs in contaminated soils under long-term acid rain. Here, a quantitative accelerated aging leaching test was conducted to evaluate the long-term release risks of PTEs from four contaminated agricultural soil types exposed to acid rain.

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The mechanisms underlying the distribution of many toxic metal(loid)s in shoots and metal(loid) transport to grains have been well documented in the quest for food safety but there remains a lack of knowledge on thallium (Tl) accumulation in food crops. Here, field investigations combined with a glasshouse pot experiment were conducted to investigate the characteristics of Tl distribution and accumulation in coix, a major food crop in south Guizhou province, China, and the role of node I in restricting Tl transport to the seed. Fourteen percent of coix seed samples collected from the Lanmuchang Tl-As-Hg mine contained higher Tl concentrations than the recommended limit for foods and feedstuffs in Germany (0.

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Phytoextraction with hyperaccumulators is an environmentally friendly and cost-effective technique for soil remediation but remediation time is largely dependent on experience due to variations in soil properties which restrict the application of this technique. Here, a novel dynamic multi-surface model (MSM) framework is proposed to predict the efficiency and duration of cadmium (Cd) and zinc (Zn) phytoextraction using the hyperaccumulator Sedum plumbizincicola. First, the application of MSM to S.

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Naturally-occurring colloids and nanoparticles are crucial in transporting heavy metal contaminants in soil-water systems. However, information on particle-bound metals' size distribution and elemental composition in paddy soils under redox-fluctuation is scarce. Here, we investigated the mobilization of Cu, Cd, and Pb-containing nanoparticles and colloids in four contaminated soils with distinctive geochemical properties during reduction and subsequent re-oxidation.

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Phytoextraction with Sedum plumbizincicola is an in-situ, environmentally friendly and highly efficient remediation technique for slightly Cd-polluted soils but it remains a challenge to remediate highly Cd-polluted soils under field conditions. Here, an 8-ha field experiment was conducted to evaluate the feasibility of repeated phytoextraction by S. plumbizincicola of a highly Cd-polluted acid agricultural soil (pH 5.

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Soil particle size may significantly affect metal distribution and stable isotopic behavior. Here, two soils were separated into four particle size fractions, namely fine sand, silt, fine silt, and colloidal particles and used to determine cadmium (Cd) and zinc (Zn) concentrations and isotope compositions. Concentrations of Cd and Zn were generally enriched in the finer particles and positively correlated with the iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) oxide contents.

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To explore the safe utilization technology of farmland polluted by the heavy metals cadmium (Cd) and lead (Pb) and to realize the safe production of agricultural products, a pot experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of two soil passivators and five foliar inhibitors on Cd and Cd-accumulation and quality of lettuce with low Pb and Cd accumulation (KCW). The results showed that different control measures had different effects on the soil pH value of lettuce, and the application of 45 g·mbiochar-based passivator had the most significant difference in improving the soil pH value, which was increased by 0.8 units compared with that in CK.

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is a cadmium (Cd) and zinc hyperaccumulator that can activate Cd by rhizosphere acidification. However, there is little understanding of the Cd leaching risk from polluted soil during phytoextraction process. Here, pot and column experiments were conducted to monitor soil Cd leaching characteristics under different rainfall simulation conditions during phytoextraction.

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The association of arsenic (As) with colloidal particles could facilitate its transport to adjacent water systems or alter its availability in soil-rice systems. However, little is known about the size distribution and composition of particle-bound As in paddy soils, particularly under changing redox conditions. Here, we incubated four As-contaminated paddy soils with distinctive geochemical properties to study the mobilization of particle-bound As during soil reduction and subsequent reoxidation.

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Soil metal(loid)s in high geological background areas occur mainly in the residual form with low bioavailability, and whether these potentially toxic elements (PTEs) in agricultural soils are harmful to human health is of considerable public concern. A paired survey using both soil and crop samples was conducted using 437 contaminated sites in east Yunnan province, southwest China. The concentration, distribution, and source of PTEs (arsenic (As), copper (Cu), zinc (Zn), lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and chromium (Cr)) in agricultural soils, and the contamination levels of and potential health risks from PTEs from different pollution sources were evaluated.

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This study employs stable isotope analysis to investigate the mechanisms of cadmium (Cd) and zinc (Zn) interaction in the metal hyperaccumulating plant species . To this end, the Cd and Zn isotope compositions of root, stem, leaf, and xylem sap samples were determined during metal uptake and translocation at different Cd and Zn concentrations. The enrichment of light isotopes of both elements in plants during uptake was less pronounced at low metal supply levels, likely reflecting the switch from a low-affinity to a high-affinity transport system at lower levels of external metal supply.

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