Metal stress and decreased tree growth in response to biosolids application in greenhouse seedlings and in situ Douglas-fir stands |
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Authors: | Cline Erica T Nguyen Quyen T N Rollins Lucy Gawel James E |
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Affiliation: | University of Washington Tacoma, 1900 Commerce St., Campus Box 358436, Tacoma, WA 98402, USA. ecline@uw.edu |
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Abstract: | ![]() To assess physiological impacts of biosolids on trees, metal contaminants and phytochelatins were measured in Douglas-fir stands amended with biosolids in 1982. A subsequent greenhouse study compared these same soils to soils amended with fresh wastewater treatment plant biosolids. Biosolids-amended field soils had significantly higher organic matter, lower pH, and elevated metals even after 25 years. In the field study, no beneficial growth effects were detected in biosolids-amended stands and in the greenhouse study both fresh and historic biosolids amendments resulted in lower seedling growth rates. Phytochelatins - bioindicators of intracellular metal stress - were elevated in foliage of biosolids-amended stands, and significantly higher in roots of seedlings grown with fresh biosolids. These results demonstrate that biosolids amendments have short- and long-term negative effects that may counteract the expected tree growth benefits. |
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