Abstract PurposeRice is a staple crop worldwide and a silicon (Si) hyperaccumulator with Si levels reaching 5–10% of its mass; this can result in desilication and Si-deficiency if plant residues are not managed correctly. Rice is also uniquely subject to arsenic (As) and cadmium (Cd) contamination depending on soil conditions. Our goal is to quantify the effects of rice husk (a Si-rich milling byproduct) amendments and different water management strategies on rice uptake of Si, As, and Cd. MethodsWe employed 4 husk amendment treatments: Control (no husk), Husk (untreated husk), Biochar (husk pyrolyzed at 450 °C), and CharSil (husk combusted at > 1000 °C). Each of these amendments was studied under nonflooded, alternate wetting and drying (AWD), and flooded water management in a pot study. Porewater chemistry and mature plant elemental composition were measured. ResultsHusk and Biochar treatments, along with flooding, increased porewater and plant Si. Vegetative tissue As decreased with increasing porewater Si, but grain As and plant Cd were primarily controlled by water management. Grain As and Cd were inversely correlated and are simultaneously minimized in a redox potential (Eh) range of 225–275 mV in the studied soil. Ferrihydrite in root iron plaque decreased As translocation from porewater to grain, but amendments were not able to increase plaque ferrihydrite content. ConclusionWe conclude moderate husk amendment rates (i.e., 4 years’ worth) with minimal pretreatment strongly increases rice Si content but may not be sufficient to decrease grain As in low Si and As soil.
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Effects of elevated CO2 on MeHg and IHg in rice
Methylmercury (MeHg) and, to a lesser extent, inorganic mercury (IHg) contamination of rice is a global public health concern, but little is known about how soil and grain Hg concentrations respond to elevated CO2 (ECO2), or how ECO2 alters movement of Hg through the soil-plant-grain system. To advance knowledge of how Hg contamination of rice will change in the future, this study explored the effect of elevated CO2 (ECO2, c. 800 ppm) on soil, iron plaque, root, stem/leaf, and grain concentrations of MeHg and IHg. We observed evidence that ECO2 increased accumulation of MeHg, but not IHg, in rice grain. For IHg, ECO2 did not alter its uptake from the soil, translocation through the plant, or concentration in rice grain. However, ECO2 did reduce uptake of IHg from the air into leaf tissues, likely as a result of the reduced stomatal conductivity and thus more limited direct uptake from the air. Methylmercury concentrations in the grain of plants grown at ECO2 were significantly higher than those of plants grown at ambient CO2. Moreover, MeHg concentrations were also elevated in stem/leaf (82 %) and root tissue (37 %) for ECO2 plants, although the root-tissue results were not statistically significant. In contrast, soil MeHg concentrations were virtually indistinguishable between treatments, indicating that higher rice grain MeHg concentrations were not likely due to higher microbial IHg methylation in soil. Plant uptake of MeHg into stem/leaves and grain from the soil was significantly greater in the ECO2 treatment; however, translocation patterns of MeHg within the plant itself did not differ between treatments. Notably, these patterns existed despite consistently lower transpiration in the ECO2 treatment, and thus less mass flow of solute towards and through the plant. Our results indicate that as CO2 concentrations rise, the human health risks related to MeHg in grain will likely increase.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1740839
- PAR ID:
- 10585066
- Publisher / Repository:
- Science Direct
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Environmental Advances
- Volume:
- 16
- Issue:
- C
- ISSN:
- 2666-7657
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 100515
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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