Influence of activated charcoal amendment to contaminated soil on dieldrin and nutrient uptake by cucumbers
2009
Hilber, Isabel | Wyss, Gabriela S. | Mäder, Paul | Bucheli, Thomas D. | Meier, Isabel | Vogt, Lea | Schulin, R (Rainer)
Activated charcoal (AC) amendments have been suggested as a promising, cost-effective method to immobilize organic contaminants in soil. We performed pot experiments over two years with cucumber (Cucumis sativusL.) grown in agricultural soil with 0.07 mg kg⁻¹ of weathered dieldrin and 0, 200, 400, and 800 mg AC per kg soil. Dieldrin fresh weight concentrations in cucumber fruits were significantly reduced from 0.012 to an average of 0.004 mg kg⁻¹, and total uptake from 2 to 1 μg in the 800 mg kg⁻¹ AC treatment compared to the untreated soil. The treatment effects differed considerably between the two years, due to different meteorological conditions. AC soil treatments did neither affect the availability of nutrients to the cucumber plants nor their yield (total fruit wet weight per pot). Thus, some important prerequisites for the successful application of AC amendments to immobilize organic pollutants in agricultural soils can be considered fulfilled. The addition of activated charcoal to soil reduced dieldrin residues in cucumbers and did not affect nutrients availability.
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