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1.
J Environ Manage ; 172: 171-6, 2016 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26945189

ABSTRACT

A field experiment was conducted from 2005 to 2008 in Fulton County, Western Illinois with biosolids from conventional wastewater treatment applied as corn fertilizer in a series of P rates (0, 163, 325, 488, 650 kg P ha(-1)) along with commercial P fertilizer - triple superphosphate P (TSP) as reference to assess biosolids-P plant availability and potential loss to waterbodies through runoff. Air-dried biosolids and TSP were incorporated into surface soil at end of 2005, and corn (Zea mays) was planted for three consecutive years (2006-2008). Concentrations of soil extractable P except for Mehlich-3 P were always lower in the biosolids than TSP treatments at the same P rates. The soil potentially available P in water extractable P (WEP) and Olsen P derived from biosolids-P estimated by the exponential depletion model was 2-4% and 15-24% of total P in the applied biosolids, respectively. The residence time of biosolids-induced WEP and Olsen P in Midwest soil under annual corn cropping was 5 and 2 years, respectively. Corn tissue analysis showed lower increase in P concentration by biosolids-P than TSP. The elevation rate of soluble reactive P (SRP) concentration in simulated runoff was less by biosolids than TSP. Based on the data in this study, the plant availability and environmental risk of biosolids-P are lower than those of TSP in the Midwest soil, thus use of biosolids as P nutrient for corn would not cause a major impairment to water sources even P applied through biosolids was not completely used by annual crop.


Subject(s)
Fertilizers , Phosphorus/pharmacokinetics , Soil/chemistry , Wastewater/chemistry , Zea mays , Biological Availability , Diphosphates , Fertilizers/analysis , Illinois , Phosphorus/analysis , Risk Assessment/methods , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
2.
J Environ Qual ; 45(1): 74-83, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26828162

ABSTRACT

Many soils at former industrial sites are degraded. The objective of this research was to determine the ability of compost, biosolids, and biosolids blends to improve soil ecosystem function with minimal potential impact to surface water. Treatments rototilled into the top 12.5 cm of soil were biosolids at 202 Mg ha; biosolids at 404 Mg ha; compost at 137 Mg ha; or a blend consisting of biosolids applied at 202 Mg ha, drinking water treatment residual, and biochar. Rainfall runoff from experimental plots was collected for 3 yr. One year after soil amendments were incorporated, a native seed mix containing grasses, legumes, and forbs was planted. Soil amendments improved soil quality and nutrient pools, established a dense and high-quality vegetative cover, and improved earthworm reproductive measures. Amendments increased soil enzymatic activities that support soil function. Biosolids treatments increased the Shannon-Weaver Diversity Index for grasses. For the forbs group, control plots had the lowest diversity index and the biosolids blend had the highest diversity index. Biosolids and compost increased the number of earthworm juveniles. In general, biosolids outperformed compost. Biosolids increased N and P in rainfall runoff more than compost before vegetation was established. Several microconstituents (i.e., pharmaceutical and personal care products) were detected in runoff water but at concentrations below the probable no-effect levels and therefore should pose little impact to the aquatic environment. Future restoration design should ensure that runoff control measures are used to control sediment loss from the restored sites at least until vegetation is established.


Subject(s)
Composting , Ecosystem , Plants , Soil , Soil Pollutants
3.
J Water Health ; 9(1): 169-86, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21301125

ABSTRACT

A microbial risk assessment was conducted to estimate the human health risks from incidental contact recreational activities such as canoeing, boating and fishing in the Chicago Area Waterway System (CAWS) receiving secondary treated, but non-disinfected, effluent from three municipal water reclamation plants. Actual concentrations of the pathogens (pathogenic E. coli [estimated], Giardia, Cryptosporidium, adenovirus, norovirus, enteric virus) detected from the waterway field data collection at locations upstream and downstream of the effluent outfall during dry and wet weather conditions within the recreation season were included in the risk assessment. The results under the current treatment scheme with no disinfection indicated that the total expected gastrointestinal illness (GI) rate per 1000 incidental contact recreational exposure events during combined weather (dry and wet) conditions ranged from 0.10 to 2.78 in the CAWS, which is below the eight illnesses per 1000 swimmers considered tolerable by the United States Environmental Protection Agency. Wet weather conditions contribute to elevated pathogen load to the CAWS; therefore this study determined that disinfecting the effluents of three major WRPs that discharge to the CAWS would result in an extremely small reduction in the aggregate recreation season risk to incidental contact recreators.


Subject(s)
Eukaryota/isolation & purification , Fresh Water/microbiology , Recreation , Risk Assessment , Viruses/isolation & purification , Water Pollutants/isolation & purification , Chicago , Environmental Monitoring , Escherichia coli/classification , Escherichia coli/isolation & purification , Eukaryota/classification , Fresh Water/parasitology , Fresh Water/virology , Humans , Phylogeny , Viruses/classification , Water Movements , Water Pollutants/classification , Weather
4.
J Environ Qual ; 38(1): 61-74, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19141796

ABSTRACT

Investigations on the impact of application of biosolids for land reclamation on C sequestration in soil were conducted at Fulton County, Illinois, where 41 fields (3.6-66 ha) received biosolids at a cumulative loading rate from 455 to 1654 dry Mg ha(-1) for 8 to 23 yr in rotation from 1972 to 2004. The fields were cropped with corn, wheat, and sorghum and also with soybean and grass or fallowed. Soil organic carbon (SOC) increased rapidly with the application of biosolids, whereas it fluctuated slightly in fertilizer controls. The peak SOC in the 0- to 15-cm depth of biosolids-amended fields ranged from 4 to 7% and was greater at higher rates of biosolids. In fields where biosolids application ceased for 22 yr, SOC was still much higher than the initial levels. Over the 34-yr reclamation, the mean net soil C sequestration was 1.73 (0.54-3.05) Mg C ha(-1) yr(-1) in biosolids-amended fields as compared with -0.07 to 0.17 Mg C ha(-1) yr(-1) in fertilizer controls, demonstrating a high potential of soil C sequestration by the land application of biosolids. Soil C sequestration was significantly correlated with the biosolids application rate, and the equation can be expressed as y = 0.064x - 0.11, in which y is the annual net soil C sequestration (Mg C ha(-1) yr(-1)), and x is annual biosolids application in dry weight (Mg ha(-1) yr(-1)). Our results indicate that biosolids applications can turn Midwest Corn Belt soils from current C-neutral to C-sink. A method for calculating SOC stock under conditions in which surface soil layer depth and mass changes is also described.


Subject(s)
Organic Chemicals/analysis , Sewage/chemistry , Soil/analysis , Carbon/analysis , Environmental Restoration and Remediation , Mining , Models, Chemical , Reference Values
5.
J Environ Qual ; 35(1): 101-13, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16391281

ABSTRACT

Biosolids are known to have a potential to restore degraded land, but the long-term impacts of this practice on the environment, including water quality, still need to be evaluated. The surface water chemistry (NO3-, NH4+, and total P, Cd, Cu, and Hg) was monitored for 31 yr from 1972 to 2002 in a 6000-ha watershed at Fulton County, Illinois, where the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago was restoring the productivity of strip-mined land using biosolids. The mean cumulative loading rates during the past 31 yr were 875 dry Mg ha(-1) for 1120-ha fields in the biosolids-amended watershed and 4.3 dry Mg ha(-1) for the 670-ha fields in the control watershed. Biosolids were injected into mine spoil fields as liquid fertilizer from 1972 to 1985, and incorporated as dewatered cake from 1980 to 1996 and air-dried solids from 1987 to 2002. The mean annual loadings of nutrients and trace elements from biosolids in 1 ha were 735 kg N, 530 kg P, 4.5 kg Cd, 30.7 kg Cu, and 0.11 kg Hg in the fields of the biosolids-amended watershed, and negligible in the fields of the control watershed. Sampling of surface water was conducted monthly in the 1970s, and three times per year in the 1980s and 1990s. The water samples were collected from 12 reservoirs and 2 creeks receiving drainage from the fields in the control watershed, and 8 reservoirs and 4 creeks associated with the fields in the biosolids-amended watershed for the analysis of NO3- -N (including NO2- N), NH4+-N, and total P, Cd, Cu, and Hg. Compared to the control (0.18 mg L(-1)), surface water NO3- -N in the biosolids-amended watershed (2.23 mg L(-1)) was consistently higher; however, it was still below the Illinois limit of 10 mg L(-1) for public and food-processing water supplies. Biosolids applications had a significant effect on mean concentrations of ammonium N (0.11 mg L(-1) for control and 0.24 mg L(-1) for biosolids) and total P (0.10 mg L(-1) for control and 0.16 mg L(-1) for biosolids) in surface water. Application of biosolids did not increase the concentrations of Cd and Hg in surface water. The elevation of Cu in surface water with biosolids application only occurred in some years of the first decade, when land-applied sludges contained high concentrations of trace metals, including Cu. In fact, following the promulgation of 40 CFR Part 503, the concentrations of all three metals fell below the method detection level (MDL) in surface water for nearly all samplings. Nitrate in the surface water tends to be higher in spring, and ammonium, total P, and total Hg in summer and fall. Mean nitrate, ammonium, and total phosphorus concentrations were found to be greater in creeks than reservoirs. The results indicate that application of biosolids for land reclamation at high loading rates from 1972 to 2002, with adequate runoff and soil erosion control, had only a minor impact on surface water quality.


Subject(s)
Water/chemistry , Metals/analysis , Mining , Nitrogen/analysis , Phosphorus/analysis
6.
J Environ Qual ; 30(5): 1653-8, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11577873

ABSTRACT

Legumes grown in biosolids-amended soils and then fed to ruminants can represent problematic sources of molybdenum (Mo), but few field data are available to quantify the risk. We used a set of fields amended to high cumulative biosolids Mo loads (>18 kg ha(-1)) over 27 yr to generate additional data. Soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] was grown on 29 fields (pH values>6.8) amended to a wide range of soil Mo loads. Soybean grain harvested from each field was analyzed for Mo and the concentrations regressed against soil Mo loads estimated from actual soil Mo concentrations in the 0- to 15-cm depth. Slopes of such linear regressions represent uptake coefficients (UC values) used by the USEPA to assess risk of biosolids Mo to ruminants fed forage grown on biosolids-amended land. The UC value for all 29 fields was estimated as 1.66, which agrees with the few soybean grain data in the literature. The UC value, however, is well below a conservative UC value of 4, recently recommended for all fresh legume materials fed to cattle. Soybean grain can contain high concentrations of Mo (>10 mg kg(-1)) and have low (<2:1) Cu to Mo ratios, which can exacerbate molybdenosis problems in cattle. However, soybean grain normally constitutes only -10% of dairy cattle diet, and other constituents (e.g., corn grain, stover, mineral supplements) are sufficient, or can be manipulated, to control molybdenosis.


Subject(s)
Glycine max/chemistry , Molybdenum/pharmacokinetics , Animal Feed , Animals , Biological Availability , Cattle , Cattle Diseases/etiology , Cattle Diseases/prevention & control , Food Contamination , Molybdenum/adverse effects , Molybdenum/chemistry , Risk Assessment , Tissue Distribution
7.
J Environ Qual ; 30(1): 140-6, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11215645

ABSTRACT

This study was part of a larger effort to generate field data appropriate to the assessment of biosolids molybdenum (Mo) risk to ruminants. Corn (Zea mays L.) is an important component of cattle diet, and is a logical crop for biosolids amendment owing to its high N requirement. Paired soil and corn stover samples archived from two unique field experiments were analyzed to quantify the relationship (uptake coefficient, UC) between stover Mo and soil Mo load. Both studies used biosolids with total Mo concentrations typical of modern materials. Data from long-term (continuous corn) plots in Fulton County, IL confirm expected low Mo accumulation by corn stover, even at very high biosolids loads and soil Mo loads estimated to be near 18 kg Mo ha(-1). Uptake slopes were actually negative, but USEPA protocol would assign UC values of 0.001. Data from plots in Minnesota also suggested essentially no correlations between stover Mo and soil Mo loads for continuous corn. However, greater Mo accumulation in corn grown following soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] suggests the possibility of enhanced Mo bioavailability to corn in corn-soybean rotations. Nevertheless, molybdenosis risk to cattle consuming corn stover produced on biosolids-amended land is small as stover Mo concentrations were always low and stover Cu to Mo ratios exceeded 2:1, which avoids molybdenosis problems.


Subject(s)
Cattle , Environmental Exposure , Molybdenum/pharmacokinetics , Zea mays/chemistry , Agriculture , Animals , Biological Availability , Diet , Risk Assessment , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Glycine max/chemistry
8.
J Environ Qual ; 23(5): 1019-1026, 1994 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34872209

ABSTRACT

A field study of industrial organic contaminant uptake, in particular PCB uptake, by growing crops was conducted during 1990 at the St. David Coal Refuse Pile Reclamation Site, Fulton County, Illinois. The site had received one-time applications in 1987 of 785, 1570 and 3360 Mg ha-1 dry wt. of Chicago municipal sewage sludge. Corn (Zea mays L.), cabbage (Brassica oleracea capitata L.), and carrot (Daucus carota L.) were grown on the sludge treatments and soil (i.e., sludge treated coal refuse) and plant samples were analyzed. Mean PCB concentratious in the soils were ≤4 mg kg-1 dry wt. and there was no consistent effect on them of sludge application rate. Measurements on the 3360 Mg ha-1 dry wt. of sludge treatment soil indicated that several organochlorine pesticides occurred at concentrations ≤217 µg kg-1 dry wt. and several polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons occurred at <1 to 3 mg kg-1 dry wt. Mean PCB concentrations in the plant materials were <300 µg kg-1 dry wt., however, there were differences among and within crops. Concentrations decreased in the order: carrot peels > carrot tops > cabbage wrapper and inner leaves > carrot core > corn ear leaf and stover > corn grain. There was insignificant PCB in corn grain. Except for cabbage wrapper leaves, the PCB concentrations in plant materials were not related to those in soil. Soil PCB concentrations accounted for 24% of the variance in cabbage wrapper leaf PCB concentrations and the bioconcentration factor (mg PCB kg-1 dry wt. of leaf/kg PCB ha-1 dry wt. of soil) was 0.0042. There was no detection of organochlorine pesticides in plant materials grown on the 3360 Mg ha-1 dry wt. of sludge treatment soil and, except for indole and isophorone, only trace amounts of a very few other organic contaminants were observed in the plant materials. Indole ranging from no detection to 52 mg kg-1 dry wt. may have been a natural constituent of cabbage. Isophorone ranging from 14 to 79 mg kg-1 dry wt. was observed in three samples of cabbage wrapper leaves and its source is unknown. Despite the very large rates of Chicago sludge employed in this study, findings indicated that they did not (i) result in high levels of organic contamination in the treated coal refuse, and (ii) represent a significant organic contaminant hazard to the quality for food and feedstuffs of crops grown on the treated coal refuse.

9.
J Exp Bot ; 40(211): 263-75, 1989 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11542157

ABSTRACT

Maize (Zea mays L.) plants with two primary nodal root axes were grown for 8 d in flowing nutrient culture with each axis independently supplied with NO3-. Dry matter accumulation by roots was similar whether 1.0 mol m-3 NO3- was supplied to one or both axes. When NO3- was supplied to only one axis, however, accumulation of dry matter within the root system was significantly greater in the axis supplied with NO3-. The increased dry matter accumulation by the +N-treated axis was attributable entirely to increased density and growth of lateral branches and not to a difference in growth of the primary axis. Proliferation of lateral branches for the +N axis was associated with the capacity for in situ reduction and utilization of a portion of the absorbed NO3-, especially in the apical region where lateral primordia are initiated. Although reduced nitrogen was translocated to the -N axis, concentrations in the -N axis remained significantly lower than in the +N axis. The concentration of reduced nitrogen, as well as in vitro NO3- reductase activity, was greater in apical than in more basal regions of the +N axis. The enhanced proliferation of lateral branches in the +N axis was accompanied by an increase in total respiration rate of the axis. Part of the increased respiration was attributable to increased mass of roots. The specific respiration rate (micromoles CO2 evolved per hour per gram root dry weight) was also greater for the +N than for the -N axis. If respiration rate is taken as representative of sink demand, stimulation of initiation and growth of laterals by in situ utilization of a localized exogenous supply of NO3- establishes an increased sink demand through enhanced metabolic activity and the increased partitioning of assimilates to the +N axis responds to the difference in sink demand between +N and -N axes.


Subject(s)
Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Nitrates/pharmacokinetics , Plant Roots/metabolism , Zea mays/metabolism , Biomass , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Fertilizers , Hydroponics , Light , Nitrogen/metabolism , Plant Roots/growth & development , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Plant Shoots/metabolism , Time Factors , Zea mays/growth & development
10.
Physiol Plant ; 76: 419-24, 1989.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11538858

ABSTRACT

The relationship between specific rate of respiration (respiration rate per unit root dry weight) and concentration of reduced nitrogen was examined for maize (Zea mays L.) roots. Plants with 2 primary nodal root axes were grown for 8 days in a split-root hydroponic system in which NO3- was supplied to both axes at 1.0 mol m-3, to one axis at 1.0 mol m-3 and the other axis at 0.0 mol m-3, or to both axes at 0.0 mol m-3. Respiration rates and root characteristics were measured at 2-day intervals. Specific rate of respiration was positively correlated in a nonlinear relationship with concentration of reduced nitrogen. The lowest specific rates of respiration occurred when neither axis received exogenous NO3- and the concentration of reduced nitrogen in the axes was less than 9 mg g-1. The greatest rates occurred in axes that were actively absorbing NO3- and contained more than 35 mg g-1 of reduced nitrogen. At 23 mg g-1 of reduced nitrogen, below which initiation of lateral branches was decreased by 30-50%, specific rate of respiration was 17% greater for roots actively absorbing NO3- than for roots not absorbing NO3-. Increases in specific rate of respiration associated with concentrations of reduced nitrogen greater than 23 mg g-1 were concluded to be attributable primarily to proliferation of lateral branches.


Subject(s)
Nitrogen/metabolism , Plant Roots/growth & development , Plant Roots/metabolism , Zea mays/metabolism , Carbon Dioxide , Cell Respiration , Culture Media , Nitrates/metabolism , Zea mays/growth & development
11.
J Exp Bot ; 39(202): 613-22, 1988 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11538214

ABSTRACT

Net uptake of NO3- by non-nodulated soybean plants [Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Ransom] growing in flowing hydroponic cultures containing 0.5, 1.0 and 10.0 mol m-3 NO3- was measured daily during a 24-d period of vegetative development to determine if amplitude of maximum and minimum rates of net NO3- uptake are responsive to external concentrations of NO3-. Removal of NO3- from the replenished solutions during each 24-h period was determined by ion chromatography. Neither dry matter accumulation nor the periodicity of oscillations in net uptake rate was altered by the external NO3- concentrations. The maxima of the oscillations in net uptake rate, however, increased nearly 3-fold in response to external NO3- concentrations. The maxima and minima, respectively, changed from 4.0 and 0.6 mmol NO3- per gram root dry weight per day at an external solution level of 0.5 mol m-3 NO3- to 15.2 and -2.7 mmol NO3- per gram root dry weight per day at an external solution level of 10.0 mol m-3 NO3-. The negative values for minimum net uptake rate from 10.0 mol m-3 NO3- solutions show that net efflux was occurring and indicate that the magnitude of the efflux component of net uptake was responsive to external concentration of NO3-.


Subject(s)
Carbon/metabolism , Fertilizers , Glycine max/metabolism , Nitrates/pharmacokinetics , Nitrogen/metabolism , Carbohydrate Metabolism , Culture Media , Hydroponics , Nitrogen/pharmacokinetics , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Plant Roots/metabolism , Plant Shoots/metabolism , Time Factors
12.
J Chem Ecol ; 11(3): 383-95, 1985 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24309969

ABSTRACT

Relative retention times and wavelength area ratios for over 50 standard compounds were calculated using reverse-phase HPLC. The standard compounds analyzed included benzoic acids, cinnamic acids, benzene carboxylic acids, acetic acids, coumarins, benzaldehydes and a variety of flavonoid compounds including flavanones, flavones, isoflavones, and their glycosides. Each standard compound was chromatographed by three different gradient elutions. Compounds were detected by UV absorption at 254 nm and 280 nm. Relative retention times with respect to two different internal references and the 254nm: 280nm wavelength area ratio was determined for each standard. Soybean root and seed extracts were analyzed for the presence of the standard compounds using the chromatographic conditions described.

13.
J Chem Ecol ; 9(8): 1281-92, 1983 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24407818

ABSTRACT

HPLC was used to obtain fingerprint patterns of organic compounds extracted from roots of five soybean varieties at seven stages of growth. Fifteen major peaks were observed in all varieties at most growth stages. With increasing stage of growth, the less polar compounds accounted for a greater relative percentage of total peak area. Concentration of compounds extracted from roots increased dramatically as plants approached nodulation and flowering and then decreased to initial levels as plants matured.

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