Enhancing the plants growth and arsenic uptake from soil using arsenite-oxidizing bacteria

Environ Pollut. 2020 Sep:264:114692. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2020.114692. Epub 2020 May 3.

Abstract

Plants, that naturally inhabit arsenic-contaminated areas may be used for effective arsenic-uptake from soil. The efficiency of this process may be increased by the reducing arsenic phytotoxicity and stimulating the activity of indigenous soil microbiota. As we showed, it can be achieved by the bioaugmenting of soil with arsenite-oxidizing bacteria (AOB). This study aimed to investigate the influence of soil bioaugmentation with AOB on the structure, quantity, and activity of the indigenous soil microbiota as well as to estimate the effect of such changes on the morphology, growth rate, and arsenic-uptake efficiency of plants. Plants-microbes interactions were investigated using the effective arsenites oxidizer Ensifer sp. M14 and the native plant alfalfa. The experiments were performed both in potted garden soil enriched with arsenic and in highly arsenic polluted, natural soil. The presence of M14 strain in soil contributed to the increase both in plants growth intensity and arsenic-uptake efficiency with regard to the soil without M14. After 40 days of plants culture, their average biomass increased by about 60% compared to non-bioaugmented soil, while the arsenic accumulation increased more than two times. The soil bioaugmentation contributed also to the increase in the quantity and activity of soil microorganisms without disturbing the natural microbial community structure. In the bioaugmented soil, the noticable increase in the quantity of heterotrophic, denitrifying, nitrifying and cellulolytic bacteria as well as in the activity of dehydrogenases and cellulases were observed. Soil bioaugmentation with M14 enables the application of native and commonly occurring plant species for enhancing the treatment of arsenic-contaminated soil. This in situ strategy may constitute a valuable alternative both to the chemical and physical methods of arsenic removal from soil and to the biological ways based on the arsenic hyperaccumulating plants and/or the arsenic mobilizing bacteria.

Keywords: Bioaugmentation; Heavy metals; Native plants; Soil microbiome; Soil treatment.

MeSH terms

  • Arsenic / analysis*
  • Arsenites*
  • Bacteria
  • Biodegradation, Environmental
  • Oxidation-Reduction
  • Soil
  • Soil Microbiology
  • Soil Pollutants / analysis*

Substances

  • Arsenites
  • Soil
  • Soil Pollutants
  • arsenite
  • Arsenic