book: Microbial indicators of heavy metal contamination in urban and rural soils [An article from: Chemosphere] | Y. Yang, C.D. Campbell, ...
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Microbial indicato...
Microbial indicators of heavy metal contamination in urban and rural soils [An article from: Chemosphere]
Y. Yang
,
C.D. Campbell
, ...
Elsevier
, 2006 - 10 pages
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This digital document is a journal
article
from
Chemosphere
, published by Elsevier in 2006. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
Urban
soils
and especially their microbiology have been a neglected area of study. In this paper, we report on
microbial
properties of urban soils compared to
rural
soils of similar lithogenic origin in the vicinity of Aberdeen city. Significant differences in basal respiration rates, microbial biomass and ecophysiological parameters were found in urban soils compared to rural soils. Analysis of community level physiological profiles (CLPP) of micro-organisms showed they consumed C sources faster in urban soils to maintain the same level activity as those in rural soils. Cu, Pb, Zn and Ni were the principal elements that had accumulated in urban soils compared with their rural counterparts with Pb being the most significant
metal
to distinguish urban soils from rural soils. Sequential extraction showed the final residue after extraction was normally the highest proportion except for Pb, for which the hydroxylamine-hydrochloride extractable Pb was the largest part. Acetic acid extractable fraction of Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn were higher in urban soils and aqua regia extractable fraction were lower suggesting an elevated availability of
heavy
metals in urban soils. Correlation analyses between different microbial
indicators
(basal respiration, biomass-C, and sole C source tests) and heavy metal fractions indicated that basal respiration was negatively correlated with soil Cd, Cu, Ni and Zn inputs while soil microbial biomass was only significantly correlated with Pb. However, both exchangeable and iron- and manganese-bound Ni fractions were mostly responsible for shift of the soil microbial community level physiological profiles (sole C source tests). These data suggest soil microbial indicators can be useful indicators of pollutant heavy metal stress on the health of urban soils.
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