THE EFFECT OF HEAVY METALS ON TOTAL SOIL MICROBIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY IN LETTUCE

1997 ◽  
pp. 133-138
Author(s):  
M. Nada ◽  
M. Govedarica ◽  
J. Mirjana ◽  
N. Petrovic
1939 ◽  
Vol 17c (8) ◽  
pp. 256-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Newton ◽  
F. A. Wyatt ◽  
V. Ignatieff ◽  
A. S. Ward

Soil microbiological activity was measured for eight seasons, 1927 to 1934, in order to study some underlying causes of the comparative effects of alfalfa, brome, timothy, and western rye grass on the yield and nitrogen content of succeeding wheat crops.When previously fallowed soil was seeded to alfalfa and grasses, the moisture and nitrate content of the soil were reduced, and generally remained at a relatively low level until the sods were plowed up. In the drier seasons the nitrates were reduced to a very low level or disappeared entirely in the grass and alfalfa plots. The nitrate content of the alfalfa plot soils was generally greater than that of the grass plots, and the brome grass plots were generally lower in nitrates than the timothy and western rye grass plots. The wheat plot soils generally contained more nitrate than the grass and alfalfa plots, especially in the drier seasons. When the sods were plowed up, nitrates accumulated in the alfalfa plots to a greater extent than in the grass plots and to a lesser extent generally in the brome plots than in the timothy and western rye plots. The greater nitrate content of the soil under wheat following alfalfa was observed for a period of three or four years in separate sets of plots plowed up two years apart. The nitrate level of the soil under wheat had a tendency to drop in mid-summer, often reaching its lowest point in July. The fallow plot soils were always higher in moisture than any of the cropped plots at the end of each season, and higher in nitrates in the latter half of each season.The concentration of water-soluble phosphorus was greatest in the surface soil and seemed to be slightly higher under alfalfa and grasses than under wheat, but the total concentration was small and there was no very definite seasonal trend.The numbers of fungi and bacteria, as determined by the plate count method for five seasons, 1929 to 1933, did not fluctuate very much in certain plots and seasons, but fluctuated greatly in others. The greatest fluctuations in fungal counts were observed under the first crop of wheat following brome grass, and in bacterial counts also under the first crop of wheat following sods, in the relatively moist season of 1931. Plate counts of actinomycetes did not fluctuate very greatly during the one season in which they were determined. The numbers of fungi were generally higher in the alfalfa plots than in the grass plots, but the differences between the grasses were apparently insignificant. Under the first crop of wheat following sods, large Mucor colonies predominated in the alfalfa plot soil plates and the counts were relatively low. Brome grass plot soils gave by far the highest counts of fungi, which consisted mainly of small Penicillium colonies, under the first crop of wheat following sods in 1931. The differences between numbers of bacteria in the alfalfa and grass plots were not very significant. The moisture content of the surface soil fluctuated greatly during most of the seasons. There was evidence of correlation between fluctuations in bacterial numbers and moisture, especially in certain seasons, in all the cropped soils. There was less evidence of such correlation in the case of fungi, except under the first crop of wheat following brome grass in 1931. Fallow soil, though normally higher in moisture content in the latter part of each season, did not differ significantly from the grass-cropped soils in counts of fungi and bacteria. Although surface samples usually gave the highest counts, the deeper soil samples (to a depth of three feet) gave fairly high counts of both fungi and bacteria. During the season of 1930, amoebae were determined by the dilution plate count method; more than 1,000 and less than 10,000 per gram were nearly always found in both cropped and fallow soils.The total nitrogen content of the plot soils showed considerable variation (owing to random sampling) from year to year, but no definite trend downwards or upwards during this period of seven years. The surface soil in every case contained most nitrogen and the subsoil least.


Pedosphere ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 577-591 ◽  
Author(s):  
Javid A. SOFI ◽  
Aabid H. LONE ◽  
Mumtaz A. GANIE ◽  
Naseer A. DAR ◽  
Sajad A. BHAT ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 43-52
Author(s):  
A. S. Mezhevova

Aim. The aim of research was to study various methods of basic soil cultivation and a domestic wastewater silt sludge application which could possibility be directed to soil fertility saving and increase in crop yields.Materials and Methods. The object of research was a safflower variety called Alexandrite. Experimental variants were carried out according to a 4-fold repetition. Experiment installation, observations and accounting were carried out in accordance with the field experiment methodology named after B.A. Dospehov.Results. Field research was undertaken in order to study the various methods of a basic tillage and a domestic wastewater silt sludge application possibility under arid conditions of the Volgograd region on light chestnut solonetz soils. The amino acid composition of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius) seeds has been estimated. The data from the study of soil microbiological activity and the effect of non-traditional fertilizers on the increase in the activity of soil biota are presented. The crop yields and economic evaluation of the Carthamus tinctorius cultivation were determined.Conclusion. Modern resource-saving soil cultivation technologies and nontraditional fertilizers are required to: maintain the fertility of slightly humus soils in this arid climate zone, increase amino acids levels in plants, increase soil biological activity, as well to increase safflower crop yields. The proposed technical solutions, employing Rancho chisel tillage with as the basic tillage together with the introduction of non-traditional fertilizers-meliorants, provides structural restoration of soil aggregates, intensification of the humus formation process, increase in soil microbiological activity and - as a result - an increase in the yield of the cultivated Carthamus tinctorius crop.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 817-826 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Synowiec ◽  
Anna Lenart-Boroń ◽  
Jan Bocianowski ◽  
Andrzej Lepiarczyk ◽  
Danuta Kalemba

2019 ◽  
pp. 135-146
Author(s):  
Aynazhan M. Aitimova ◽  
Gusman Zh. Kenzhetayev ◽  
Vladimir N. Permyakov

Investigations were carried out to study the state of the soil in the territory of the Shetpe South chalk deposit and in the area of the Caspian Cement plant in October 2018. 20 soil samples were taken. Samples were taken from a depth of 0–20 cm. The presence of heavy metals in the soil was determined by atomic absorption spectrometry using AAC MGA-915M (Lumex, Russia), their content was compared with background values and with existing maximum allowable concentrations. The total soil pollution indicator or ZC , using the background, was used to study the state of the soil. The indicators of the soil pollution index were calculated to improve the diagnostic performance of the study area. The calculation of the total soil pollution indicator showed that the value of ZC for all sites was from 3,58 to 5,26 units. The soils are characterized as non-hazardous (ZC < 16), and the assessment of the condition of the soil is biased due to taking into account only heavy metals with KC < 1. The soil pollution index calculations showed that the majority of soil samples at sites PP-1, PP-2 and PP-3 have indicators of soil pollution index > 1, which characterizes the soil as "polluted". At site PP-4 (control) the soil pollution index is 0,74, the soils are "clean". Statistical processing in the environment Statistica 10 showed that the Kruskal — Wallis criterion is statistically significant only for Ni and As (p < 0,05) for soil samples at site PP-2 (at the site of transportation of chalk and dumps). Maps were performed using satellite imagery and using of Google Maps, Mapinfo Professionalv. 12.


2013 ◽  
pp. 231-236
Author(s):  
M. Pesaković ◽  
R. Miletić ◽  
Z. Karaklajić-Stajić ◽  
J. Luković

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