Interactive effect of compost application and inoculation with the fungus Claroideoglomus claroideum in Oenothera picensis plants growing in mine tailings
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Pérez, Rodrigo
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Interactive effect of compost application and inoculation with the fungus Claroideoglomus claroideum in Oenothera picensis plants growing in mine tailings
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Abstract
Different techniques have been developed for the remediation of Cu contaminated soils, being the phytoremediation
a sustainable and environmentally friendly strategy, but its use in mine tailings is scarce. Arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) can decrease the Cu concentration in plants by favouring the stabilization of this metal
through different mechanisms such as the production of glomalin, immobilization in the fungal wall of hyphae
and spores, and the storage of Cu in vacuoles. Additionally, the use of organic amendments promotes the
beneficial effects produced by AMF and improves plant growth. Based on the above, the aim of this study was to
determine the effect of AMF inoculation and compost application at different doses on the growth of Oenothera
picensis in a Cu mine tailing. One group of plants were inoculated with Claroideoglomus claroideum (CC) and other
was non-inoculated (NM). Both CC and NM were grown for two month under greenhouse conditions in pots with
the Cu mine tailing, which also had increasing compost doses (0%, 2.5%, 5%, and 10%). Results showed greater
biomass production of O. picensis by CC up to 2-fold compared with NM. This effect was improved by the compost
addition, especially at doses of 5% and 10%. Therefore, the increase of mycorrhizal and nutritional parameters in
O. picensis, and the decreasing of Cu availability in the mine tailing, promoted the production of photosynthetic
pigments together with the plant growth, which is of importance to accomplish phytoremediation programs in
Cu mine tailings.
Patrocinador
National Agency for Research and Development (ANID), Scientific & Technological Rings in Mining Topics program ANID/PIA/ACM 170002
Water Resources Center for Agriculture and Mining ANID/FONDAP/15130015
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Artículo de publícación WoS Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 208 (2021) 111495
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