The impact of metal pollution on soil faunal and microbial activity in two grassland ecosystems.

Environ Res

Laboratory of Systemic Physiological and Ecotoxicological Research, Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Groenenborgerlaan 171, 2020 Antwerp, Belgium.

Published: October 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed how metal pollution affects soil functional activity using two methods: Bait lamina assay for animal feeding activity and BIOLOG EcoPlate assay for microbial metabolism.
  • Changes in soil communities were notable, with feeding activity dropping from 90% in less polluted areas to just 10% near pollution sources.
  • Metal pollutants like arsenic, copper, and lead negatively impacted feeding activity and microbial functions, suggesting that the BIOLOG assay might provide a more consistent measure than the Bait lamina method due to its reduced sensitivity to environmental variations.

Article Abstract

In this study the influence of metal pollution on soil functional activity was evaluated by means of Bait lamina and BIOLOG(®) EcoPlates™ assays. The in situ bait lamina assay investigates the feeding activity of macrofauna, mesofauna and microarthropods while the BIOLOG(®) EcoPlate™ assay measures the metabolic fingerprint of a selectively extracted microbial community. Both assays proved sensitive enough to reveal changes in the soil community between the plots nearest to and further away from a metal pollution source. Feeding activity (FA) at the less polluted plots reached percentages of 90% while plots nearer to the source of pollution reached percentages as low as 10%. After 2 and 6 days of incubation average well color development (AWCD) and functional richness (R') were significantly lower at the plots closest to the source of pollution. While the Shannon Wiener diversity index (H') decreased significantly at sites nearer to the source of pollution after 2 days but not after 6 days of incubation. Arsenic, Cu and Pb correlated significantly and negatively with feeding activity and functional indices while the role of changing environmental factors such as moisture percentage could not be ruled out completely. Compared to the Bait lamina method that is used in situ and which is therefore more affected by site specific variation, the BIOLOG assay, which excludes confounding factors such as low moisture percentage, may be a more reliable assay to measure soil functional activity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2014.06.024DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

metal pollution
12
bait lamina
12
feeding activity
12
source pollution
12
pollution soil
8
soil functional
8
functional activity
8
reached percentages
8
nearer source
8
days incubation
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!