Litcius/Paper detail

PFOA and PFOS induces mineralization of soil organic carbon by accelerating the consumption of dissolved organic carbon

Yu-Long Li, Bowei Lv, Zhendong Chen, Jianming Xue, Wu Li, Xiaoman He, Lie Yang

2024Carbon Research17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The wide spread of Perfluoroalkyl substances (e.g., PFOA and PFOS) in soil can alter native soil geochemical properties and microbial communities through various approaches. Nonetheless, it is unclear that how PFOA and PFOS in soil affect the mineralization of soil organic carbon (SOC). A laboratory-scale culture experiment (180 d) was performed to explore the contribution of PFOA and PFOS to SOC dynamics and soil geochemical processes. Results showed that positive priming effect (PE) occurred in the short term (i.e., 30 days after PFOA and PFOS addition) and subsequently shifted to a slightly negative PE (i.e., 90 days) and remained in a significant negative PE thereafter (i.e., > 180 days). The PEs caused by PFOA and PFOS both accelerated the consumption of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), resulting in a significant increase in SOC mineralization (10.45%–127.36%) under the short-term incubation (30 d). As for long-term exposure (> 90 d), the organic carbon mineralization rate was significantly reduced (58.30%–65.24%) due to the excessive DOC consumption in the initial stage. High throughput analysis indicated that both PFOA and PFOS changed soil bacterial and fungal community structures, altered the relevant metabolic pathways and resulted in the enrichment of specific taxa. Graphical Abstract

Topics & Concepts

Mineralization (soil science)Environmental chemistrySoil carbonDissolved organic carbonTotal organic carbonCarbon fibersEnvironmental scienceChemistrySoil scienceSoil waterMaterials scienceComposite numberComposite materialPer- and polyfluoroalkyl substances researchCarbon Dioxide Capture TechnologiesFluoride Effects and Removal
PFOA and PFOS induces mineralization of soil organic carbon by accelerating the consumption of dissolved organic carbon | Litcius