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Enzymatic Assessment of the State of Oil-Contaminated Soils in the South of Russia after Bioremediation

Soil pollution with oil as a result of accidents at oil pipelines and oil refineries is a frequent occurrence in the south of Russia. To restore such polluted lands, it is necessary to carry out soil remediation measures. This work aimed to evaluate the use of ameliorants of various natures (biochar...

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Autores principales: Minnikova, Tatyana, Kolesnikov, Sergey, Revina, Sofia, Ruseva, Anna, Gaivoronsky, Vladimir
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10144481/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37112582
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxics11040355
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author Minnikova, Tatyana
Kolesnikov, Sergey
Revina, Sofia
Ruseva, Anna
Gaivoronsky, Vladimir
author_facet Minnikova, Tatyana
Kolesnikov, Sergey
Revina, Sofia
Ruseva, Anna
Gaivoronsky, Vladimir
author_sort Minnikova, Tatyana
collection PubMed
description Soil pollution with oil as a result of accidents at oil pipelines and oil refineries is a frequent occurrence in the south of Russia. To restore such polluted lands, it is necessary to carry out soil remediation measures. This work aimed to evaluate the use of ameliorants of various natures (biochar, sodium humate, and microbial preparation Baikal EM-1) to restore the ecological state of oil-contaminated soils with different properties (Haplic Chernozem, Haplic Arenosols, Haplic Cambisols). To assess the ecological state of soils, the following physicochemical and biological indicators were studied: residual oil content, redox potential, and medium reaction (pH). Changes in enzymatic activity were also studied, including catalase, dehydrogenases, invertase, urease, and phosphatase. The greatest decomposition of oil in Haplic Chernozem and Haplic Cambisols was provided by Baikal EM-1 (56 and 26%), and in Haplic Arenosols, this was provided by biochar (94%) and sodium humate (93%). In oil-contaminated Haplic Cambisols, the content of easily soluble salts with the addition of biochar and Baikal EM-1 increased by 83 and 58%, respectively. The introduction of biochar caused an increase in pH from 5.3 (Haplic Cambisols) to 8.2 (Haplic Arenosols). The introduction of oil-contaminated Haplic Arenosols of biochar, humate, and Baikal stimulated the activity of catalase and dehydrogenases by 52–245%. The activity of invertase was stimulated in the Haplic Chernozem after the introduction of ameliorants by 15–50%. The activity of urease was stimulated after the introduction of ameliorants into borax and Arenosol by 15–250%. The most effective ameliorant for restoring the ecological state of Haplic Cambisols after oil pollution was biochar. For Haplic Arenosols, this was sodium humate, and for Haplic Chernozem, the effectiveness of biochar and sodium humate did not differ. The most informative indicator for the remediation of Haplic Chernozem and Haplic Cambisols was the activity of dehydrogenases, and for Haplic Arenosols, this was the activity of phosphatase. The results of the study should be used to biomonitor the ecological state of oil-contaminated soils after bioremediation.
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spelling pubmed-101444812023-04-29 Enzymatic Assessment of the State of Oil-Contaminated Soils in the South of Russia after Bioremediation Minnikova, Tatyana Kolesnikov, Sergey Revina, Sofia Ruseva, Anna Gaivoronsky, Vladimir Toxics Article Soil pollution with oil as a result of accidents at oil pipelines and oil refineries is a frequent occurrence in the south of Russia. To restore such polluted lands, it is necessary to carry out soil remediation measures. This work aimed to evaluate the use of ameliorants of various natures (biochar, sodium humate, and microbial preparation Baikal EM-1) to restore the ecological state of oil-contaminated soils with different properties (Haplic Chernozem, Haplic Arenosols, Haplic Cambisols). To assess the ecological state of soils, the following physicochemical and biological indicators were studied: residual oil content, redox potential, and medium reaction (pH). Changes in enzymatic activity were also studied, including catalase, dehydrogenases, invertase, urease, and phosphatase. The greatest decomposition of oil in Haplic Chernozem and Haplic Cambisols was provided by Baikal EM-1 (56 and 26%), and in Haplic Arenosols, this was provided by biochar (94%) and sodium humate (93%). In oil-contaminated Haplic Cambisols, the content of easily soluble salts with the addition of biochar and Baikal EM-1 increased by 83 and 58%, respectively. The introduction of biochar caused an increase in pH from 5.3 (Haplic Cambisols) to 8.2 (Haplic Arenosols). The introduction of oil-contaminated Haplic Arenosols of biochar, humate, and Baikal stimulated the activity of catalase and dehydrogenases by 52–245%. The activity of invertase was stimulated in the Haplic Chernozem after the introduction of ameliorants by 15–50%. The activity of urease was stimulated after the introduction of ameliorants into borax and Arenosol by 15–250%. The most effective ameliorant for restoring the ecological state of Haplic Cambisols after oil pollution was biochar. For Haplic Arenosols, this was sodium humate, and for Haplic Chernozem, the effectiveness of biochar and sodium humate did not differ. The most informative indicator for the remediation of Haplic Chernozem and Haplic Cambisols was the activity of dehydrogenases, and for Haplic Arenosols, this was the activity of phosphatase. The results of the study should be used to biomonitor the ecological state of oil-contaminated soils after bioremediation. MDPI 2023-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10144481/ /pubmed/37112582 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxics11040355 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Minnikova, Tatyana
Kolesnikov, Sergey
Revina, Sofia
Ruseva, Anna
Gaivoronsky, Vladimir
Enzymatic Assessment of the State of Oil-Contaminated Soils in the South of Russia after Bioremediation
title Enzymatic Assessment of the State of Oil-Contaminated Soils in the South of Russia after Bioremediation
title_full Enzymatic Assessment of the State of Oil-Contaminated Soils in the South of Russia after Bioremediation
title_fullStr Enzymatic Assessment of the State of Oil-Contaminated Soils in the South of Russia after Bioremediation
title_full_unstemmed Enzymatic Assessment of the State of Oil-Contaminated Soils in the South of Russia after Bioremediation
title_short Enzymatic Assessment of the State of Oil-Contaminated Soils in the South of Russia after Bioremediation
title_sort enzymatic assessment of the state of oil-contaminated soils in the south of russia after bioremediation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10144481/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37112582
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxics11040355
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