Study of the increase in phytoremediation efficiency in a nickel polluted soil by the usage of native bacteria: Bacillus safensis FO.036b and Micrococcus roseus M2

Nickel (Ni) is a heavy metal and soil pollutant but existence of small amount of it as a metallic part of urease enzyme in the plants is necessary. Remediation of spots contaminated with heavy metals is particularly challenging. Phytoremediation, the use of plants for environmental restoration, is...

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Main Authors: Motesharezadeh, B., Savaghebi-Firoozabadi, Gh.R.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Guilan 2011-05-01
Series:Caspian Journal of Environmental Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cjes.guilan.ac.ir/article_1065.html
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spelling doaj-7e9b79772af34740b95620daaeec2abd2020-11-24T23:11:10ZengUniversity of GuilanCaspian Journal of Environmental Sciences 1735-30331735-38662011-05-0192133143Study of the increase in phytoremediation efficiency in a nickel polluted soil by the usage of native bacteria: Bacillus safensis FO.036b and Micrococcus roseus M2Motesharezadeh, B.Savaghebi-Firoozabadi, Gh.R.Nickel (Ni) is a heavy metal and soil pollutant but existence of small amount of it as a metallic part of urease enzyme in the plants is necessary. Remediation of spots contaminated with heavy metals is particularly challenging. Phytoremediation, the use of plants for environmental restoration, is a novel clean up technology. In this study, five levels of nickel [control (Ni0), Ni125, Ni250, Ni500 and Ni1000 (mg kg-١ )] as nickel chloride (NiCl2.6H2O) and three levels of bacterial inoculants [control (B0), Bacillus safensis FO.036b (B1) and Micrococcus roseus M2 (B2)] were used in sunflower (Helianthus annus), amaranthus (Amaranthus retroflexus) and alfalfa (Medicago sativa) for phytoextraction of nickel. A factorial experiment with a randomized complete block design (RCBD) with three replications was used. Results demonstrated that by increasing the nickel concentration in soil, its absorption by the plants has increased significantly. The highest concentration of nickel was found in shoot of amaranthus (176.83 mg kg-1) and in the root of plants, in alfalfa (462.73 mg kg-1) by usage of inoculant (P<0.05). The highest absorption of nickel occurred with B1 inoculant in amaranthus, which was 459.41 µgPot-1. Applying this inoculant may also cause an increase in concentration of iron and zinc in the root and shoot of the plants. https://cjes.guilan.ac.ir/article_1065.htmlSoil pollutionPhytoremediationNickelHeavy metalBioaugmentation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Motesharezadeh, B.
Savaghebi-Firoozabadi, Gh.R.
spellingShingle Motesharezadeh, B.
Savaghebi-Firoozabadi, Gh.R.
Study of the increase in phytoremediation efficiency in a nickel polluted soil by the usage of native bacteria: Bacillus safensis FO.036b and Micrococcus roseus M2
Caspian Journal of Environmental Sciences
Soil pollution
Phytoremediation
Nickel
Heavy metal
Bioaugmentation
author_facet Motesharezadeh, B.
Savaghebi-Firoozabadi, Gh.R.
author_sort Motesharezadeh, B.
title Study of the increase in phytoremediation efficiency in a nickel polluted soil by the usage of native bacteria: Bacillus safensis FO.036b and Micrococcus roseus M2
title_short Study of the increase in phytoremediation efficiency in a nickel polluted soil by the usage of native bacteria: Bacillus safensis FO.036b and Micrococcus roseus M2
title_full Study of the increase in phytoremediation efficiency in a nickel polluted soil by the usage of native bacteria: Bacillus safensis FO.036b and Micrococcus roseus M2
title_fullStr Study of the increase in phytoremediation efficiency in a nickel polluted soil by the usage of native bacteria: Bacillus safensis FO.036b and Micrococcus roseus M2
title_full_unstemmed Study of the increase in phytoremediation efficiency in a nickel polluted soil by the usage of native bacteria: Bacillus safensis FO.036b and Micrococcus roseus M2
title_sort study of the increase in phytoremediation efficiency in a nickel polluted soil by the usage of native bacteria: bacillus safensis fo.036b and micrococcus roseus m2
publisher University of Guilan
series Caspian Journal of Environmental Sciences
issn 1735-3033
1735-3866
publishDate 2011-05-01
description Nickel (Ni) is a heavy metal and soil pollutant but existence of small amount of it as a metallic part of urease enzyme in the plants is necessary. Remediation of spots contaminated with heavy metals is particularly challenging. Phytoremediation, the use of plants for environmental restoration, is a novel clean up technology. In this study, five levels of nickel [control (Ni0), Ni125, Ni250, Ni500 and Ni1000 (mg kg-١ )] as nickel chloride (NiCl2.6H2O) and three levels of bacterial inoculants [control (B0), Bacillus safensis FO.036b (B1) and Micrococcus roseus M2 (B2)] were used in sunflower (Helianthus annus), amaranthus (Amaranthus retroflexus) and alfalfa (Medicago sativa) for phytoextraction of nickel. A factorial experiment with a randomized complete block design (RCBD) with three replications was used. Results demonstrated that by increasing the nickel concentration in soil, its absorption by the plants has increased significantly. The highest concentration of nickel was found in shoot of amaranthus (176.83 mg kg-1) and in the root of plants, in alfalfa (462.73 mg kg-1) by usage of inoculant (P<0.05). The highest absorption of nickel occurred with B1 inoculant in amaranthus, which was 459.41 µgPot-1. Applying this inoculant may also cause an increase in concentration of iron and zinc in the root and shoot of the plants.
topic Soil pollution
Phytoremediation
Nickel
Heavy metal
Bioaugmentation
url https://cjes.guilan.ac.ir/article_1065.html
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