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1.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 18548, 2022 11 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36329111

ABSTRACT

Soil degradation resulting from deforestation contributes to a dramatic decline in soil quality whose restoration must go through reforestation with pioneer species. We investigated the effects of cypress and black locust, pioneer but exotic species, on soil chemical properties and microbial and enzymatic activities of two marginal soils. The sampling sites were Lama Giulia and Locone lake in the Murge plateau of the Apulia Region, Italy. The soils at Lama Giulia presented a silty loam texture, while at Locone Lake site were sandy, and most likely due to the different texture, the former exhibited higher organic C, N, P and micronutrients contents than Locone Lake under black locust reforestation, despite the latter was reforested earlier. In addition, the higher microbial entropy and turnover of Locone Lake's soils suggested a less conservative soil state than Lama Giulia's soils. The effects of black locust reforestation at Lama Giulia on almost all soil parameters considered did not differ from those of the corresponding pasture, confirming the more conservative soil state in that site and suggesting that the time of reforestation was not enough to get differences between the reforested and not reforested soil. The soils reforested with cypress showed the significantly highest SOC, N, dissolved organic C and microbial biomass C content. In addition, it presented also the numerically largest dehydrogenase, phosphatase and ß-glucosidase activities, soluble carbohydrates, and phenolic compounds content. These results may be ascribed to the longer litter deposition occurred in cypress soils.


Subject(s)
Soil Pollutants , Soil , Soil/chemistry , Soil Microbiology , Soil Pollutants/metabolism , Biomass , Italy
2.
Waste Manag ; 28(11): 2183-91, 2008 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18042373

ABSTRACT

The effects of amendment with municipal solid waste compost (MSWC) and anaerobically digested sewage sludge (SS) on the compositional and structural features of soil humic acids (HAs) were investigated. For this purpose, HAs were isolated from MSWC, SS, and two different Portuguese soils, a sandy Haplic Podzol and a clay loam Calcic Vertisol, which were either unamended or amended with MSWC or SS at a rate of 60 t ha(-1). The isolated HAs were analyzed for elemental and acidic functional group composition, and by ultraviolet/visible, Fourier transform infrared (FT IR), and fluorescence spectroscopies. The application of MSWC and especially SS to soils determined an increase of C, N, H, and S contents and E4/E6 ratios (i.e., ratios of absorbances at 465 and 665 nm), and a decrease of O, COOH, and phenolic OH contents and C/N, C/H, and O/C ratios of soil HAs. The FT IR and fluorescence results showed that the organic amendments, especially SS, caused an increase of the aliphatic character and a decrease of the degrees of aromatic polycondensation, polymerization, and humification of amended soil HAs. Both MSWC and SS affected more markedly the clayey soil HAs than the sandy soil HAs, possibly due to less extended mineralization processes and the protective action of clay minerals on amended soil HAs.


Subject(s)
Humic Substances/analysis , Refuse Disposal/methods , Sewage , Soil/analysis , Elements , Organic Chemicals/analysis , Portugal , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared , Water/analysis
3.
Biodegradation ; 18(2): 159-65, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16758274

ABSTRACT

A 120-day aerobic incubation experiment was conducted to study the effects of pig slurry application on soil microbial activity. Pig slurry was added to soil at rates of 0 (control treatment), 150 and 300 m(3) ha(-1). Soil samples were taken after 0, 7, 14, 30, 45, 60, and 120 days of incubation and analyzed for total organic C and microbial biomass C contents, and basal respiration. Most of the organic C applied to soil with pig slurry was readily decomposed within 30 days. During the first phase (0 to 14-30 days), the addition of pig slurry to the soil, especially at the larger rate, increased microbial biomass C content, microbial biomass C/total organic C ratio, basal respiration, and metabolic quotient. The microbial growth and the increase of their activity that these results reflected were not persistent, since the initially measured values in pig slurry-amended soils decreased and reached those of the control soil in a relatively short time.


Subject(s)
Agriculture , Industrial Waste , Soil Microbiology , Aerobiosis , Animals , Biomass , Carbon/analysis , Swine
4.
J Environ Qual ; 34(3): 1131-7, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15888899

ABSTRACT

The knowledge of acid-base characteristics of humic acid (HA) and fulvic acid (FA) fractions of organic amendments and amended soils is of considerable importance for assessing their agronomic efficacy and environmental impact. In this work, the acid-base properties of HAs and FAs isolated from pig slurry, soils amended with either 90 or 150 m(3) ha(-1) yr(-1) of pig slurry for 3 yr, and the corresponding nonamended control soil were investigated by using a current potentiometric titration method. The nonideal competitive adsorption (NICA) model that describes proton binding by two classes of binding sites (carboxylic- and phenolic-type groups) was successfully fit to titration data. With respect to the control soil HA and FA, pig-slurry HA and FA were generally characterized by smaller carboxylic-type group contents, slightly smaller phenolic-type group contents, larger affinities for proton binding by the carboxylic-type groups, and much smaller, in the case of the HA fraction, or similar, in the case of the FA fraction, affinities for proton binding by the phenolic-type groups. Amendment with pig slurry determined a number of modifications in soil HAs and FAs, including decrease of acidic functional group contents, and slight increase of the proton affinity of the carboxylic-type groups. Further, a slight decrease of the affinities for proton binding by the phenolic-type groups of HAs was observed. These effects can have a large impact on the biological availability, mobilization, and transport of macro- and micronutrients, toxic metal ions, and xenobiotic organic cations in pig slurry-amended soils.


Subject(s)
Benzopyrans/chemistry , Humic Substances , Manure , Models, Theoretical , Animals , Biological Availability , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Metals, Heavy , Protons , Swine , Xenobiotics
5.
J Agric Food Chem ; 50(17): 4867-74, 2002 Aug 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12166973

ABSTRACT

The effect of three annually consecutive additions of pig slurry at two rates (90 and 150 m3 x ha(-1) x year(-1) on soils and soil humic acids (HAs) was investigated in a field experiment under semiarid conditions. Soils and pig slurries were analyzed by standard methods. The HAs were isolated from soils and pig slurry by a conventional procedure based on alkaline extraction, acidic precipitation to pH 1, purification by repeated alkaline dissolutions and acidic precipitations, water washing, dialysis, and final freeze-drying. The HAs obtained were analyzed for elemental (C, H, N, S, and O) and acidic functional group (carboxylic and phenolic) composition, and by UV-vis, FT-IR, fluorescence, and ESR spectroscopies. With respect to the control soil, the pig slurry amended soils had greater pH and electrical conductivity, slightly larger total N content, and smaller values of C/N ratio. A decrease of total organic C was observed only in soils amended for 2 and 3 years at the higher slurry rate. With respect to control soil HA, pig slurry HA was characterized by larger contents of S- and N-containing groups, smaller acidic functional group and organic free radical contents, a prevalent aliphatic character, extended molecular heterogeneity, and smaller aromatic polycondensation and humification degrees. Amendment with pig slurry HA determines a number of modifications in soil HAs, including increase of C, S, and COOH contents, C/N ratios, and aliphaticity and decrease of extraction yields and N, O, phenolic OH, and organic free radical contents. These effects are generally more evident after the first year of slurry application and tend to disappear with increasing number of treatments. Most probably, over the years the slightly humified slurry HA is mineralized through extended microbial oxidation, whereas only the most recalcitrant components, such as S-containing, phenolic, and aliphatic structures, are partially accumulated by incorporation into soil HA.


Subject(s)
Fertilizers , Humic Substances/analysis , Manure , Soil/analysis , Swine , Animals , Carbon/analysis , Carboxylic Acids/analysis , Chemical Precipitation , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Hydrogen/analysis , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Hydroxybenzoates/analysis , Nitrogen/analysis , Oxygen/analysis , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared , Sulfur/analysis
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