0
Clinical Trial ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 1 ? Systematic review or meta-analysis. Synthesizes findings across many studies. Strongest evidence. Environmental Sources Remediation Sign in to save

Effect of glyphosate contamination on surface charge change and nutrients of degraded Inceptisols ameliorated with sub-bituminous coal

Journal of Degraded and Mining Lands Management 2024 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Herviyanti Herviyanti, Amsar Maulana, Mimien Harianti, Arestha Leo Lita, Teguh Budi Prasetyo, Pitri Juwita, Reza Tri Kurnianto, Syafrimen Yasin

Summary

This study found that glyphosate contamination significantly altered the chemical properties of degraded soils, but adding sub-bituminous coal as an amendment improved pH, organic matter, cation exchange capacity, and nutrient levels. The coal amendment partially counteracted glyphosate's negative effects on soil health, suggesting a practical approach for rehabilitating herbicide-contaminated agricultural land.

The widespread use of glyphosate to eradicate weeds in agricultural areas has the potential for contamination and residues in the soil that must be carefully considered. This study aimed to elucidate the effect of glyphosate contamination on the chemical properties of an Inceptisol ameliorated with sub-bituminous coal. This study used a completely randomized design with three treatments and three replications, namely A = control (soil with no glyphosate and sub-bituminous coal), B = 5 kg soil + 100 mg glyphosate L-1, and C = 5 kg soil + 40 t sub-bituminous coal ha-1 + 100 mg glyphosate L-1. The results showed that glyphosate contamination significantly affected pH, electrical conductivity (EC), mineral and organic matter (OM) composition, cation exchange capacity (CEC), organic carbon (OC), total N, and available P of an Inceptisol ameliorated with sub-bituminous coal. The application of 40 t sub-bituminous coal ha-1 as an alternative ameliorant improved pH H2O by 0.30, EC by 0.05 dS m-1, OM by 1.03%, CEC by 18.08 cmol(+) kg-1, OC by 1.16%, total N by 0.20% and available P by 5.47 ppm of the soil compared to the control. The residual glyphosate concentration in the soil ameliorated with sub-bituminous coal was 0.04 mg kg-1 compared to the initial glyphosate concentration of 100 mg L-1. The correlation between glyphosate residue had no significant relationship with the chemical properties of an Inceptisol ameliorated with sub-bituminous coal.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Clinical Trial Tier 1

Impact of Glyphosate Contamination on Chemical Properties of Inceptisols Amelioration with Biochar from Rice Husks, Young Coconut Waste, and Bamboo

Biochar amendments partially mitigated the negative effects of glyphosate contamination on soil chemical properties in Inceptisols. Rice husk biochar was most effective at stabilizing soil pH, cation exchange capacity, and organic carbon levels, suggesting biochar can help buffer agricultural soils against herbicide damage.

Article Tier 2

Degradation Process of Herbicides in Biochar-Amended Soils: Impact on Persistence and Remediation

This review examines how biochar — a carbon-rich soil amendment — affects the persistence and degradation of herbicides in soil. While biochar can reduce some pollutants, it may also slow the natural breakdown of agricultural chemicals, illustrating complex tradeoffs in soil remediation.

Article Tier 2

Effects of Biochar and its Reapplication on Soil pH and Sorption Properties of Silt Loam Haplic Luvisol

Biochar was tested on agricultural soil to assess its effects on pH and nutrient sorption, finding modest improvements that persisted with reapplication. While focused on soil management, biochar is also studied as a potential tool for improving soil health in contaminated environments.

Article Tier 2

Bioremediation: advances in using soil organic amendments to manage contaminants in agricultural soils

This review examines how organic soil amendments including compost, biochar, and chitosan can immobilize toxic trace elements and support biodegradation of organic pollutants, addressing the EU finding that 61% of soils are in an unhealthy state and exploring remediation approaches.

Article Tier 2

Iron-Modified Biochar Strengthens Simazine Adsorption and Decreases Simazine Decomposition in the Soil

Researchers found that iron-modified biochar significantly increased simazine herbicide adsorption in soil while slowing its microbial degradation, suggesting that while modified biochar reduces pesticide leaching risk, it may also extend herbicide persistence and alter soil microbial communities.

Share this paper