Authors |
Checa-Fernández, A; Santos, A; Chicaiza, KY; Martin-Sanz, JP; Valverde-Asenjo, I; Quintana, JR; Fernández, J; Domínguez, CM |
Abstract |
This study assessed for the first time the bioremediation potential of an organic horse amendment in soils contaminated with solid wastes of the obsolete pesticide lindane (alpha-hexachlorocyclohexane (alpha-HCH) = 80 mg kg(-1), beta-HCH = 40 mg kg(-1), gamma,delta,epsilon-HCH approximate to 10 mg kg(-1)) searching for a self-sufficient bio-based economy. Four treatments were implemented: polluted (PS, Sigma HCHs = 130 mg kg(-1)) and control (CS, Sigma HCHs = 1.24 mg kg(-1)) soils and the respective amended soils (APS and ACS). A commercial amendment, coming from organic wastes, was used for soil biostimulation (5% dry weight), and the temporal evolution of the enzymatic activity (dehydrogenase, beta-glucosidase activity, phenoloxidase, arylamidase, phosphatase, and urease) and HCHs concentration of the soils was evaluated over 55 days under controlled humidity and temperature conditions. The horse amendment positively influenced the physicochemical properties of the soil by reducing pH (from 8.3 to 8) and increasing the organic matter (TOC from 0.5 to 3.3%) and nutrient content (P and NH4+ from 24.1 to 13.7 to 142.1 and 41.2 mg kg(-1), respectively). Consequently, there was a notable enhancement in the soil biological activity, specifically in the enzymatic activity of dehydrogenase, phenol-oxidase, phosphatase, and urease and, therefore, in HCH degradation, which increased from <1 to 75% after the incubation period. According to the chlorine position on the cyclohexane ring, the following ranking has been found for HCHs degradation: beta-HCH (46%) < epsilon-HCH (57%) < alpha-HCH (91%) approximate to delta-HCH (91%) < gamma-HCH (100%). Pentachlorocyclohexene (PCCH) and 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene (1,2,4-TCB) were identified as HCHs degradation metabolites and disappeared at the end of the incubation time. Although further research is required, these preliminary findings suggest that organic amendments represent a sustainable, harmless, and cost-effective biostimulation approach for remediating soils contaminated with recalcitrant HCHs, boosting the circular economy. |