Litcius/Paper detail

Effects and Mechanisms of Copper Oxide Nanoparticles with Regard to Arsenic Availability in Soil–Rice Systems: Adsorption Behavior and Microbial Response

Qianhua Wu, Xiaohan Jiang, Hanxin Wu, Lina Zou, Lubin Wang, Jiyan Shi

2022Environmental Science & Technology50 citationsDOI

Abstract

Copper oxide nanoparticles (CuO NPs) are widely used as fungicides in agriculture. Arsenic (As) is a ubiquitous contaminant in paddy soil. The present study was focused on the adsorption behavior of CuO NPs with regard to As as well as the characteristics of the microbial community changes in As-contaminated soil–rice systems in response to CuO NPs. The study found that CuO NPs could be a temporary sink of As in soil; a high dose of CuO NPs promoted the release of As from crystalline iron oxide, which increased the As content in the liquid phase. The study also found that the As bioavailability changed significantly when the dose of CuO NPs was higher than 50 mg kg–1 in the soil–rice system. The addition of 100 mg kg–1 CuO NPs increased the microbial diversity and the abundance of genes involved in As cycling, decreased the abundance of Fe(III)-reducing bacteria and sulfate-reducing genes, and decreased As accumulation in grains. Treatment with 500 mg kg–1 CuO NPs increased the abundance of Fe(III)-reducing bacteria and sulfate-reducing genes, decreased Fe plaques, and increased As accumulation in rice. The adverse effects of CuO NPs on crops and associated risks need to be considered carefully.

Topics & Concepts

ArsenicBioavailabilityAdsorptionChemistryEnvironmental chemistrySulfateNanoparticleMicrobial population biologyCopperBacteriaMaterials scienceBiologyNanotechnologyBioinformaticsGeneticsOrganic chemistryArsenic contamination and mitigationHeavy metals in environmentNanoparticles: synthesis and applications