AI Article Synopsis

  • Copper contamination in soils poses risks to health, requiring remediation for agriculture and industry.
  • This study tested the use of copper-resistant bacteria to enhance the ability of oatmeal plants to remove copper from contaminated vineyard soils and mining waste in Southern Brazil.
  • Oatmeal, especially when treated with specific bacteria, significantly increased copper extraction, showing promise for bioaugmentation strategies to clean up polluted areas.

Article Abstract

Copper contaminated areas pose environmental health risk to living organisms. Remediation processes are thus required for both crop production and industrial activities. This study employed bioaugmentation with copper resistant bacteria to improve phytoremediation of vineyard soils and copper mining waste contaminated with high copper concentrations. Oatmeal plant (Avena sativa L.) was used for copper phytoextraction. Three copper resistant bacterial isolates from oatmeal rhizosphere (Pseudomonas putida A1; Stenotrophomonas maltophilia A2 and Acinetobacter calcoaceticus A6) were used for the stimulation of copper phytoextraction. Two long-term copper contaminated vineyard soils (Mollisol and Inceptisol) and copper mining waste from Southern Brazil were evaluated. Oatmeal plants substantially extracted copper from vineyard soils and copper mining waste. As much as 1549 mg of Cu kg⁻¹ dry mass was extracted from plants grown in Inceptisol soil. The vineyard Mollisol copper uptake (55 mg Cu kg⁻¹ of dry mass) in the shoots was significantly improved upon inoculation of oatmeal plants with isolate A2 (128 mg of Cu kg⁻¹ of shoot dry mass). Overall oatmeal plant biomass displayed higher potential of copper phytoextraction with inoculation of rhizosphere bacteria in vineyard soil to the extent that 404 and 327 g ha⁻¹ of copper removal were respectively observed in vineyard Mollisol bioaugmented with isolate A2 (S. maltophilia) and isolate A6 (A. calcoaceticus). Results suggest potential application of bacterial stimulation of phytoaccumulation of copper for biological removal of copper from contaminated areas.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2010.09.047DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

copper
17
copper contaminated
12
vineyard soils
12
copper mining
12
mining waste
12
copper phytoextraction
12
dry mass
12
bacterial stimulation
8
stimulation copper
8
rhizosphere bacteria
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!