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Mitigating microplastic stress on peanuts: The role of biochar-based synthetic community in the preservation of soil physicochemical properties and microbial diversity

The Science of The Total Environment 2024 15 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Zitian Pu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Zitian Pu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Zitian Pu, Zitian Pu, Hong Yu, Dandan Wang, Zitian Pu, Zitian Pu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Shuaibing Wang, Shuaibing Wang, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Yinglong Chen, Yinglong Chen, Chao Wang, Chao Wang, Yinglong Chen, Yongshan Wan, Hong Yu, Hong Yu, Yuanjie Dong, Yuanjie Dong, Jianguo Wang, Jianguo Wang, Shubo Wan, Yinglong Chen, Shubo Wan, Shubo Wan, Yinglong Chen, Shubo Wan, Shubo Wan, Shubo Wan, Dandan Wang, Shubo Wan, Xie Zhi-hong Shubo Wan, Shubo Wan, Xie Zhi-hong

Summary

Researchers found that tire-derived microplastics in soil harmed peanut plant growth and disrupted soil bacteria, but adding biochar with a specially designed bacterial community helped counteract the damage. The biochar treatment restored soil health, improved microbial diversity, and boosted peanut growth even in microplastic-contaminated soil. This approach could help protect food crops from the harmful effects of microplastic pollution in agricultural land.

Tire-derived rubber crumbs (RC), as a new type of microplastics (MPs), harms both the environment and human health. Excessive use of plastic, the decomposition of which generates microplastic particles, in current agricultural practices poses a significant threat to the sustainability of agricultural ecosystems, worldwide food security and human health. In this study, the application of biochar, a carbon-rich material, to soil was explored, especially in the evaluation of synthetic biochar-based community (SynCom) to alleviate RC-MP-induced stress on plant growth and soil physicochemical properties and soil microbial communities in peanuts. The results revealed that RC-MPs significantly reduced peanut shoot dry weight, root vigor, nodule quantity, plant enzyme activity, soil urease and dehydrogenase activity, as well as soil available potassium, and bacterial abundance. Moreover, the study led to the identification highly effective plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) from the peanut rhizosphere, which were then integrated into a SynCom and immobilized within biochar. Application of biochar-based SynCom in RC-MPs contaminated soil significantly increased peanut biomass, root vigor, nodule number, and antioxidant enzyme activity, alongside enhancing soil enzyme activity and rhizosphere bacterial abundance. Interestingly, under high-dose RC-MPs treatment, the relative abundance of rhizosphere bacteria decreased significantly, but their diversity increased significantly and exhibited distinct clustering phenomenon. In summary, the investigated biochar-based SynCom proved to be a potential soil amendment to mitigate the deleterious effects of RC-MPs on peanuts and preserve soil microbial functionality. This presents a promising solution to the challenges posed by contaminated soil, offering new avenues for remediation.

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