AI Article Synopsis

  • Research on carbonaceous nanomaterials (CNMs) in agricultural soils is limited, prompting a study on their effects on soybean growth and nitrogen fixation in soils with varying concentrations of CNMs like multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs), graphene nanoplatelets (GNPs), and carbon black (CB).
  • Plants exposed to any CNM treatment flowered significantly earlier than controls, showing increased reproductive success, but also demonstrated reduced growth, with some treatments resulting in shorter plants and less overall leaf area.
  • The study found that lower concentrations of CNMs negatively impacted nodulation and nitrogen fixation potential more than higher concentrations, possibly due to better bioavailability of CNMs in soil at lower doses, highlighting complexities in how CNMs affect plant

Article Abstract

The potential effects of carbonaceous nanomaterials (CNMs) on agricultural plants are of concern. However, little research has been performed using plants cultivated to maturity in soils contaminated with various CNMs at different concentrations. Here, we grew soybean for 39 days to seed production in soil amended with 0.1, 100, or 1000 mg kg of either multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs), graphene nanoplatelets (GNPs), or carbon black (CB) and studied plant growth, nodulation, and dinitrogen (N) fixation potential. Plants in all CNM treatments flowered earlier (producing 60% to 372% more flowers when reproduction started) than the unamended controls. The low MWCNT-treated plants were shorter (by 15%) with slower leaf cover expansion (by 26%) and less final leaf area (by 24%) than the controls. Nodulation and N fixation potential appeared negatively impacted by CNMs, with stronger effects at lower CNM concentrations. All CNM treatments reduced the whole-plant N fixation potential, with the highest reductions (by over 91%) in the low and medium CB and the low MWCNT treatments. CB and GNPs appeared to accumulate inside nodules as observed by transmission electron microscopy. CNM dispersal in aqueous soil extracts was studied to explain the inverse dose-response relationships, showing that CNMs at higher concentrations were more agglomerated (over 90% CNMs settled as agglomerates >3 μm after 12 h) and therefore proportionally less bioavailable. Overall, our findings suggest that lower concentrations of CNMs in soils could be more impactful to leguminous N fixation, owing to greater CNM dispersal and therefore increased bioavailability at lower concentrations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5860665PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.7b01337DOI Listing

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