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Effect of compost addition on arsenic uptake, morphological and physiological attributes of maize plants grown in contrasting soils

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Effect of compost addition on arsenic uptake, morphological and physiological attributes of maize plants grown in contrasting soils. / Mehmood, Tariq; Bibi, Irshad; Shahid, Muhammad et al.
In: Journal of Geochemical Exploration, Vol. 178, 01.07.2017, p. 83-91.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Mehmood, T, Bibi, I, Shahid, M, Niazi, NK, Murtaza, B, Wang, H, Ok, YS, Sarkar, B, Javed, MT & Murtaza, G 2017, 'Effect of compost addition on arsenic uptake, morphological and physiological attributes of maize plants grown in contrasting soils', Journal of Geochemical Exploration, vol. 178, pp. 83-91. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gexplo.2017.03.018

APA

Mehmood, T., Bibi, I., Shahid, M., Niazi, N. K., Murtaza, B., Wang, H., Ok, Y. S., Sarkar, B., Javed, M. T., & Murtaza, G. (2017). Effect of compost addition on arsenic uptake, morphological and physiological attributes of maize plants grown in contrasting soils. Journal of Geochemical Exploration, 178, 83-91. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gexplo.2017.03.018

Vancouver

Mehmood T, Bibi I, Shahid M, Niazi NK, Murtaza B, Wang H et al. Effect of compost addition on arsenic uptake, morphological and physiological attributes of maize plants grown in contrasting soils. Journal of Geochemical Exploration. 2017 Jul 1;178:83-91. doi: 10.1016/j.gexplo.2017.03.018

Author

Mehmood, Tariq ; Bibi, Irshad ; Shahid, Muhammad et al. / Effect of compost addition on arsenic uptake, morphological and physiological attributes of maize plants grown in contrasting soils. In: Journal of Geochemical Exploration. 2017 ; Vol. 178. pp. 83-91.

Bibtex

@article{8a7df1f6870a4191acc381542fe1b737,
title = "Effect of compost addition on arsenic uptake, morphological and physiological attributes of maize plants grown in contrasting soils",
abstract = "Contamination of soils with arsenic (As) represents a global environmental and health issue considering the entrance of toxic As in the human food chain. Although partially understood, addition of compost for the remediation of As-contaminated soils may result in distinct effects on plant growth and physiological attributes depending on compost-mediated potential mobility/sequestration of As in soils. This study explores the role of compost addition (C; 0, 1 and 2.5%) on morphological and gas exchange attributes and photosynthetic pigments (chlorophyll contents) of maize plants under As stress (0, 40, 80, 120 mg kg− 1), as well as soil As immobilization/mobilization in a pot experiment, using two contrasting soils. Results revealed that, in Narwala (sandy loam) soil, the addition of compost decreased shoot As concentration of maize plants (p < 0.05; 4.01–13.7 mg kg− 1 dry weight (DW)), notably at C2.5 treatment, with significant improvement in shoot dry biomass, gas exchange attributes and chlorophyll (a and b) contents, i.e., 1.33–1.82, 1.20–2.65 and 1.34–1.66 times higher, respectively, over C0 at all As levels. Contrastingly, in Shahkot (clay loam) soil, C2.5 treatment increased shoot As concentration (p < 0.05; 7.02–17.3 mg kg− 1 DW), and as such reduced the shoot dry biomass, gas exchange attributes and chlorophyll contents, compared to the control – rather C1 treatment was more effective and exhibited positive effect than C2.5. Considerably, at C2.5 treatment, phosphate extractable (bioavailable) soil As concentration was also found to be greater in the (post-experiment) Shahkot soil than that of Narwala soil (0.40–3.82 vs. 0.19–1.51 mg kg− 1, respectively). This study advanced our understanding to resolve the complex compost-As interactions in As-contaminated soils, which are imperative to understand for developing the effective and soil-specific remediation strategies.",
author = "Tariq Mehmood and Irshad Bibi and Muhammad Shahid and Niazi, {Nabeel Khan} and Behzad Murtaza and Hailong Wang and Ok, {Yong Sik} and Binoy Sarkar and Javed, {Muhammad Tariq} and Ghulam Murtaza",
year = "2017",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.gexplo.2017.03.018",
language = "English",
volume = "178",
pages = "83--91",
journal = "Journal of Geochemical Exploration",
issn = "0375-6742",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effect of compost addition on arsenic uptake, morphological and physiological attributes of maize plants grown in contrasting soils

AU - Mehmood, Tariq

AU - Bibi, Irshad

AU - Shahid, Muhammad

AU - Niazi, Nabeel Khan

AU - Murtaza, Behzad

AU - Wang, Hailong

AU - Ok, Yong Sik

AU - Sarkar, Binoy

AU - Javed, Muhammad Tariq

AU - Murtaza, Ghulam

PY - 2017/7/1

Y1 - 2017/7/1

N2 - Contamination of soils with arsenic (As) represents a global environmental and health issue considering the entrance of toxic As in the human food chain. Although partially understood, addition of compost for the remediation of As-contaminated soils may result in distinct effects on plant growth and physiological attributes depending on compost-mediated potential mobility/sequestration of As in soils. This study explores the role of compost addition (C; 0, 1 and 2.5%) on morphological and gas exchange attributes and photosynthetic pigments (chlorophyll contents) of maize plants under As stress (0, 40, 80, 120 mg kg− 1), as well as soil As immobilization/mobilization in a pot experiment, using two contrasting soils. Results revealed that, in Narwala (sandy loam) soil, the addition of compost decreased shoot As concentration of maize plants (p < 0.05; 4.01–13.7 mg kg− 1 dry weight (DW)), notably at C2.5 treatment, with significant improvement in shoot dry biomass, gas exchange attributes and chlorophyll (a and b) contents, i.e., 1.33–1.82, 1.20–2.65 and 1.34–1.66 times higher, respectively, over C0 at all As levels. Contrastingly, in Shahkot (clay loam) soil, C2.5 treatment increased shoot As concentration (p < 0.05; 7.02–17.3 mg kg− 1 DW), and as such reduced the shoot dry biomass, gas exchange attributes and chlorophyll contents, compared to the control – rather C1 treatment was more effective and exhibited positive effect than C2.5. Considerably, at C2.5 treatment, phosphate extractable (bioavailable) soil As concentration was also found to be greater in the (post-experiment) Shahkot soil than that of Narwala soil (0.40–3.82 vs. 0.19–1.51 mg kg− 1, respectively). This study advanced our understanding to resolve the complex compost-As interactions in As-contaminated soils, which are imperative to understand for developing the effective and soil-specific remediation strategies.

AB - Contamination of soils with arsenic (As) represents a global environmental and health issue considering the entrance of toxic As in the human food chain. Although partially understood, addition of compost for the remediation of As-contaminated soils may result in distinct effects on plant growth and physiological attributes depending on compost-mediated potential mobility/sequestration of As in soils. This study explores the role of compost addition (C; 0, 1 and 2.5%) on morphological and gas exchange attributes and photosynthetic pigments (chlorophyll contents) of maize plants under As stress (0, 40, 80, 120 mg kg− 1), as well as soil As immobilization/mobilization in a pot experiment, using two contrasting soils. Results revealed that, in Narwala (sandy loam) soil, the addition of compost decreased shoot As concentration of maize plants (p < 0.05; 4.01–13.7 mg kg− 1 dry weight (DW)), notably at C2.5 treatment, with significant improvement in shoot dry biomass, gas exchange attributes and chlorophyll (a and b) contents, i.e., 1.33–1.82, 1.20–2.65 and 1.34–1.66 times higher, respectively, over C0 at all As levels. Contrastingly, in Shahkot (clay loam) soil, C2.5 treatment increased shoot As concentration (p < 0.05; 7.02–17.3 mg kg− 1 DW), and as such reduced the shoot dry biomass, gas exchange attributes and chlorophyll contents, compared to the control – rather C1 treatment was more effective and exhibited positive effect than C2.5. Considerably, at C2.5 treatment, phosphate extractable (bioavailable) soil As concentration was also found to be greater in the (post-experiment) Shahkot soil than that of Narwala soil (0.40–3.82 vs. 0.19–1.51 mg kg− 1, respectively). This study advanced our understanding to resolve the complex compost-As interactions in As-contaminated soils, which are imperative to understand for developing the effective and soil-specific remediation strategies.

U2 - 10.1016/j.gexplo.2017.03.018

DO - 10.1016/j.gexplo.2017.03.018

M3 - Journal article

VL - 178

SP - 83

EP - 91

JO - Journal of Geochemical Exploration

JF - Journal of Geochemical Exploration

SN - 0375-6742

ER -