By-products as amendment to improve biochemical properties of trace element contaminated soils: Effects in time

The use of in situ amendments for chemical stabilization of inorganic pollutants requires some indication of the longevity and sustainability of their effects. The efficiency and residual effect of different amendments for chemical stabilization of trace elements was evaluated in a contaminated soil under field conditions, based on single or repeated applications. Three amendments, two organic (biosolids compost and leonardite) and one inorganic (sugarlime), were applied to a soil contaminated by the tailings dam spill at Aznalcóllar (S. Spain), together with an unamended control. Amendments were applied in 2002 and 2003 to replicated test plots. In 2005 each plot was halved: one half received further amendments in 2005 and 2006 (4 treatments, D4) and the other received no further treatment (2 treatments, D2). The efficacy of the different treatments was evaluated in surface (0–15 cm) and sub-surface (15–30 cm) soil horizons. Both organic amendments significantly increased pH and TOC contents of amended soils, accompanied by reduced trace element extractability (CaCl2 extraction). The inorganic amendment reduced extractable trace element pools and maintained alkaline conditions, but did not affect TOC. The need for repeated amendment applications to sustain these conditions depended on the type of amendment. Two consecutive applications, D2, of the inorganic amendment showed sustained efficacy. Both organic amendments required repeated applications for full effectiveness. These results demonstrate that there are clear differences in the potential long-term sustainability of in situ amendments in field conditions and that treated soils require an effective monitoring programme as part of any post-treatment management.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Burgos, Pilar, Madejón, Paula, Cabrera, Francisco, Madejón, Engracia
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:EDTA extraction, CaCl2 extraction, Remediation, Frequency of application, Semi-arid condition,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/28764
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spelling dig-irnas-es-10261-287642018-09-13T07:19:07Z By-products as amendment to improve biochemical properties of trace element contaminated soils: Effects in time Burgos, Pilar Madejón, Paula Cabrera, Francisco Madejón, Engracia EDTA extraction CaCl2 extraction Remediation Frequency of application Semi-arid condition The use of in situ amendments for chemical stabilization of inorganic pollutants requires some indication of the longevity and sustainability of their effects. The efficiency and residual effect of different amendments for chemical stabilization of trace elements was evaluated in a contaminated soil under field conditions, based on single or repeated applications. Three amendments, two organic (biosolids compost and leonardite) and one inorganic (sugarlime), were applied to a soil contaminated by the tailings dam spill at Aznalcóllar (S. Spain), together with an unamended control. Amendments were applied in 2002 and 2003 to replicated test plots. In 2005 each plot was halved: one half received further amendments in 2005 and 2006 (4 treatments, D4) and the other received no further treatment (2 treatments, D2). The efficacy of the different treatments was evaluated in surface (0–15 cm) and sub-surface (15–30 cm) soil horizons. Both organic amendments significantly increased pH and TOC contents of amended soils, accompanied by reduced trace element extractability (CaCl2 extraction). The inorganic amendment reduced extractable trace element pools and maintained alkaline conditions, but did not affect TOC. The need for repeated amendment applications to sustain these conditions depended on the type of amendment. Two consecutive applications, D2, of the inorganic amendment showed sustained efficacy. Both organic amendments required repeated applications for full effectiveness. These results demonstrate that there are clear differences in the potential long-term sustainability of in situ amendments in field conditions and that treated soils require an effective monitoring programme as part of any post-treatment management. Peer reviewed 2010-10-27T14:53:52Z 2010-10-27T14:53:52Z 2010 artículo http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 International Biodeterioration & Biodegradation 64: 481-488 (2010) 0964-8305 http://hdl.handle.net/10261/28764 10.1016/j.ibiod.2010.05.009 en http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ibiod.2010.05.009 none
institution IRNAS ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-irnas-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IRNAS España
language English
topic EDTA extraction
CaCl2 extraction
Remediation
Frequency of application
Semi-arid condition
EDTA extraction
CaCl2 extraction
Remediation
Frequency of application
Semi-arid condition
spellingShingle EDTA extraction
CaCl2 extraction
Remediation
Frequency of application
Semi-arid condition
EDTA extraction
CaCl2 extraction
Remediation
Frequency of application
Semi-arid condition
Burgos, Pilar
Madejón, Paula
Cabrera, Francisco
Madejón, Engracia
By-products as amendment to improve biochemical properties of trace element contaminated soils: Effects in time
description The use of in situ amendments for chemical stabilization of inorganic pollutants requires some indication of the longevity and sustainability of their effects. The efficiency and residual effect of different amendments for chemical stabilization of trace elements was evaluated in a contaminated soil under field conditions, based on single or repeated applications. Three amendments, two organic (biosolids compost and leonardite) and one inorganic (sugarlime), were applied to a soil contaminated by the tailings dam spill at Aznalcóllar (S. Spain), together with an unamended control. Amendments were applied in 2002 and 2003 to replicated test plots. In 2005 each plot was halved: one half received further amendments in 2005 and 2006 (4 treatments, D4) and the other received no further treatment (2 treatments, D2). The efficacy of the different treatments was evaluated in surface (0–15 cm) and sub-surface (15–30 cm) soil horizons. Both organic amendments significantly increased pH and TOC contents of amended soils, accompanied by reduced trace element extractability (CaCl2 extraction). The inorganic amendment reduced extractable trace element pools and maintained alkaline conditions, but did not affect TOC. The need for repeated amendment applications to sustain these conditions depended on the type of amendment. Two consecutive applications, D2, of the inorganic amendment showed sustained efficacy. Both organic amendments required repeated applications for full effectiveness. These results demonstrate that there are clear differences in the potential long-term sustainability of in situ amendments in field conditions and that treated soils require an effective monitoring programme as part of any post-treatment management.
format artículo
topic_facet EDTA extraction
CaCl2 extraction
Remediation
Frequency of application
Semi-arid condition
author Burgos, Pilar
Madejón, Paula
Cabrera, Francisco
Madejón, Engracia
author_facet Burgos, Pilar
Madejón, Paula
Cabrera, Francisco
Madejón, Engracia
author_sort Burgos, Pilar
title By-products as amendment to improve biochemical properties of trace element contaminated soils: Effects in time
title_short By-products as amendment to improve biochemical properties of trace element contaminated soils: Effects in time
title_full By-products as amendment to improve biochemical properties of trace element contaminated soils: Effects in time
title_fullStr By-products as amendment to improve biochemical properties of trace element contaminated soils: Effects in time
title_full_unstemmed By-products as amendment to improve biochemical properties of trace element contaminated soils: Effects in time
title_sort by-products as amendment to improve biochemical properties of trace element contaminated soils: effects in time
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/28764
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AT madejonpaula byproductsasamendmenttoimprovebiochemicalpropertiesoftraceelementcontaminatedsoilseffectsintime
AT cabrerafrancisco byproductsasamendmenttoimprovebiochemicalpropertiesoftraceelementcontaminatedsoilseffectsintime
AT madejonengracia byproductsasamendmenttoimprovebiochemicalpropertiesoftraceelementcontaminatedsoilseffectsintime
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