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A study of the structure and metal tolerance of the soil microbial community six years after cessation of sewage sludge applications
Author(s) -
Witter Ernst,
Gong Ping,
Bååth Erland,
Marstorp Håkan
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
environmental toxicology and chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.1
H-Index - 171
eISSN - 1552-8618
pISSN - 0730-7268
DOI - 10.1002/etc.5620190805
Subject(s) - amendment , sewage sludge , microbial population biology , environmental chemistry , sewage , biomass (ecology) , soil water , soil contamination , environmental science , soil respiration , soil pollutants , metal , chemistry , contamination , ecology , environmental engineering , biology , soil science , bacteria , organic chemistry , political science , law , genetics
Abstract Changes in soil microbial community structure and development of metal tolerance as a result of past applications of unamended sewage sludge and metal‐amended sewage sludge were found in soils of a long‐term field experiment at Braunschweig, Germany. Both the rate of sewage sludge application and metal amendment affected the size and activity of the microbial biomass and had caused changes in microbial community structure as seen by differences in phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) profiles. Past sewage sludge additions and metal amendment had an effect on the microbial respiratory response to 15 different C substrates, but both the magnitude and the direction of this response were substrate dependent. Differences between the soils in the respiratory response to the substrates were therefore probably largely determined by differences in the composition of the microbial consortia utilizing the substrates. The level of metal tolerance of the soil bacterial community determined by the thymidine incorporation technique and that of the microbial consortium growing on glucose in situ (determined from respiration measurements) increased with the level of metal contamination of the soil. Metal tolerance measurements could identify the metal with the largest toxicity effect in this experiment with multiple metal‐polluted sewage sludge.

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