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J Hazard Mater ; 143(1-2): 522-31, 2007 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17110026

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of two Cr species (Cr(3+) and Cr(6+)) on N and C mineralization and dehydrogenase activity in semi-arid soils. The Cr species (250 mg kg(-1)soil) were either added alone or mixed with tannery sludge (0.0125 g g(-1)) to three soils: cultivated soils, and outside and under the canopy of mesquite trees were then incubated for 180 days at 25 degrees C. Sole Cr(6+) addition had a higher inhibition of CO(2) production rate in cultivated soil (58-73%) than in soils under the canopy and outside the canopy. Soil outside the canopy amended with Cr(6+) showed the highest inhibition of dehydrogenase activity (40-100%) followed by cultivated and under the canopy soils. However, Cr(6+) added alone increased the inhibition of nitrification in soil outside the canopy (68-84%, from 30 to 120 days), followed by under the canopy and cultivated soils. The addition of tannery sludge to Cr(6+) significantly reduce the CO(2) production rate and dehydrogenase activity in all three soils, and increased the inhibition of nitrification in the following order: outside the canopy, cultivated and under the canopy soils. The addition of Cr(3+) or Cr(3+) plus tannery sludge either stimulated or inhibited CO(2) production rate, dehydrogenate activity and ammonification in the three soils in no clearly defined order. Measurement of dehydrogenase activity was the best tool for assessing the harmful effect of Cr(6+) on soil microbial activity in semi-arid soils exposed for an extended period.


Subject(s)
Carbon/metabolism , Chromium/metabolism , Nitrogen/metabolism , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Soil Microbiology , Desert Climate , Industrial Waste , Mexico , Soil/analysis , Tanning
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