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Plant growth and uptake of mineral elements at an oily sludge landfarming site in Kuwait
Authors:AS ElNawawy  IH ElBagouri  R Al-Daher  S Khalafawi
Abstract:Oily sludge landfarmed in Kuwait soil contains higher concentrations of certain elements than that of the untreated of, soil, e.g. S, Cu, Cr, Zn, Pb, Ni, Mo and V. The growth and elemental content of three different plants grown on a sandy soil previously treated with different concentrations of oily sludge were studied. Tested plants differed in their response to landfarmed oily sludge; ryegrass was the least affected followed by oats, then barley. Uptake of elements differed both qualitatively and quantitatively between test plants. In barley, Zn increased in plants cultivated in soil treated with oily sludge, whereas other metal concentrations were reduced or not affected, namely, Cu, Pb, Ni, V. The uptake of P was greater in plants grown on treated soil compared with those on untreated soil, whereas Na, Ca, K, were either reduced or unaffected. In oats, Zn, Ni, Cu, Pb, V, were not significantly changed. Uptakes of K, Ca, P, and Na in plants from treated soil were higher than that of the control. In ryegrass, heavy metal concentrations were either reduced or remained the same as that of the control. In all cases, concentrations of essential heavy metals and other true elements under investigation were still lower than the levels considered to be sufficient for micronutrients. Thus, the oily sludge was a source of certain micro-nutrients which were deficient in the sandy soil. Further, it appears that uptake and distribution of elements in plant tissues were both highly variable according to the plant, species, and the soil characteristics.
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