TY - JOUR
T1 - Fe(III) reduction mediates vanadium release and reduction in vanadium contaminated paddy soil under different organic amendments
AU - Jia, Rong
AU - Huang, Xiaoxuan
AU - Dang, Panpan
AU - Chen, Qiaolin
AU - Zhong, Sining
AU - Fan, Fangmei
AU - Wang, Chao
AU - Song, Jianxiao
AU - Chorover, Jon
AU - Rensing, Christopher
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s)
PY - 2024/11
Y1 - 2024/11
N2 - Vanadium(V) contaminated soil is abundant in iron(Fe) oxides due to co-occurrence of V and Fe bearing minerals. However, biogeochemical transformation of redox-active V and Fe in soil, and the bacteria involved, has remained less investigated. This study explored the extent to which microbial mediated organic decomposition coupled to Fe(III) reduction contributed to V(V) release/reduction in V-contaminated paddy soil under different organic amendments. Soil flooding decreased toxic reducible V while increased less toxic oxidizable V. Glucose and straw promoted V(V) release with temporarily increasing V(V) concentration by 73.59–106.34 mg/kg compared to the control treatment and subsequently promoted V(V) reduction with decreasing V(V) to concentrations eventually similar to the control treatment. Biochar incorporation under glucose and straw amendments moderately alleviated V(V) release. The significantly positive correlation between Fe(II) and V(V) concentrations during the V solubilization process indicated a temporal coupling of Fe(III) reduction and V(V) release. Clostridium and Massilia mediated Fe(III) reductive dissolution and V(V) release, while Anaeromyxobacter, Sphingomonas, Bryobacter, Acidobacteriaceae and Anaerolineaceae contributed to V(V) reduction. This study provides a deeper understanding of V biotransformation coupled to Fe and C cycling and suggests a remediation strategy for V-contaminated soils via regulating Fe(III) reduction to weaken V(V) release or to promote V(V) reduction.
AB - Vanadium(V) contaminated soil is abundant in iron(Fe) oxides due to co-occurrence of V and Fe bearing minerals. However, biogeochemical transformation of redox-active V and Fe in soil, and the bacteria involved, has remained less investigated. This study explored the extent to which microbial mediated organic decomposition coupled to Fe(III) reduction contributed to V(V) release/reduction in V-contaminated paddy soil under different organic amendments. Soil flooding decreased toxic reducible V while increased less toxic oxidizable V. Glucose and straw promoted V(V) release with temporarily increasing V(V) concentration by 73.59–106.34 mg/kg compared to the control treatment and subsequently promoted V(V) reduction with decreasing V(V) to concentrations eventually similar to the control treatment. Biochar incorporation under glucose and straw amendments moderately alleviated V(V) release. The significantly positive correlation between Fe(II) and V(V) concentrations during the V solubilization process indicated a temporal coupling of Fe(III) reduction and V(V) release. Clostridium and Massilia mediated Fe(III) reductive dissolution and V(V) release, while Anaeromyxobacter, Sphingomonas, Bryobacter, Acidobacteriaceae and Anaerolineaceae contributed to V(V) reduction. This study provides a deeper understanding of V biotransformation coupled to Fe and C cycling and suggests a remediation strategy for V-contaminated soils via regulating Fe(III) reduction to weaken V(V) release or to promote V(V) reduction.
KW - Flooded paddy soil
KW - Iron(III) reduction
KW - Organic carbon decomposition
KW - Vanadium biotransformation
KW - Vanadium tolerant and reducing bacteria
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U2 - 10.1016/j.envint.2024.109073
DO - 10.1016/j.envint.2024.109073
M3 - Article
C2 - 39442321
AN - SCOPUS:85207077825
SN - 0160-4120
VL - 193
JO - Environment international
JF - Environment international
M1 - 109073
ER -