Lime and compost promote plant re-colonization of metal-polluted, acidic soils.

Int J Phytoremediation

Area del Medio Ambiente, Facultad de Agronomía, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Quillota, Chile.

Published: September 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on the revegetation of soils in Central Chile contaminated by historical industrial activities, assessing plant re-colonization and soil health changes after amending plots with lime and/or compost.
  • Application of lime and compost successfully reduced harmful copper (Cu2+) levels in the soil, suggesting effective Cu immobilization, but lime alone did not enhance plant growth compared to untreated soils.
  • However, using compost or a combination of lime and compost improved plant cover and biomass due to better nutrient availability and ability to retain water, although copper concentrations in certain plant species remained consistent across treatments.

Article Abstract

The revegetation of soils affected by historic depositions of an industrial complex in Central Chile was studied. The plant re-colonization from the existing soil seed bank and changes in the physico-chemical properties of the soil were evaluated in field plots amended with lime and/or compost. We found that the application of lime and/or compost decreased the Cu2+ ion activity in the soil solution and the exchangeable Cu in the soil, showing an effective Cu immobilization in the topsoil. Whereas lime application had no effect on plant productivity in comparison with the unamended control, the application of compost and lime+compost increased the plant cover and aboveground biomass due to the higher nutrient availability and water-holding capacity of the compost-amended soils. Although the Cu2+ activity and the exchangeable Cu were markedly lower in the amended soils than in the unamended control, the shoot Cu concentrations of Lolium spp. and Eschscholzia californica did not differ between the treatments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15226514.2011.628716DOI Listing

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