Litcius/Paper detail

Biomass production, metal and nutrient content in sorghum plants grown on soils amended with sewage sludge

Laura Arló, Andrés Beretta, Ariel A. Szögi, A. del Pino

2021Heliyon17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, respectively. Sludge treatments increased plants' nutrient absorption and dry matter production. The LS treatments incremented plant biomass production, depending on soil pH and nutrient availability. The effect of sludge treatments on elemental concentration in aboveground biomass depended on the element, treatments, and soil type. Mineralized nitrogen (N) and plant available phosphorus (P-Bray 1) values increased with sludge addition without exceeding Uruguay's critical soil level of P-Bray 1 for the sorghum crop. The PS did not increase metal concentration in soils. The LS slightly decreased soil Pb and slightly increased Cr and Zn soil concentration; levels were according to Uruguayan environmental guidelines. Therefore, agriculture soils are a viable final destination for PS and LS. Land applied sludge has acceptable levels of metals and promotes crop development.

Topics & Concepts

SorghumSoil waterAgronomySewage sludgeNutrientPhosphorusEnvironmental scienceBiomass (ecology)AmendmentChemistryEnvironmental chemistrySewageEnvironmental engineeringBiologySoil scienceOrganic chemistryPolitical scienceLawHeavy metals in environmentWastewater Treatment and ReuseElectrokinetic Soil Remediation Techniques