Evaluation of the nitrogen cycle in an agricultural soil disturbed with nickel-salphen and zinc-salphen compounds

Soil ecosystem provides fundamental services as biogeochemical cycle regulation. Nitrogen cycle is managed by the microbiota that it harbors and depends on the stability of the ecosystem to cope abiotic disturbances such as metal and metalloid contamination. High concentrations of nickel (Ni) and zi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: López Pacheco, Andrea Alicia, Escárcega-Bobadilla, Martha Verónica, Mondragón-Camarillo, Laura, Hayano-Kanashiro, Corina, Varela-Romero, Alejandro, Vílchez-Vargas, Ramiro, Calderón Alvarado, Kadiya
Tipo de recurso: artículo
Estado:Versión publicada
Fecha de publicación:2020
País:México
Institución:UNIVERSIDAD DE SONORA
Repositorio:Biotecnia
Idioma:español
OAI Identifier:oai:oai.biotecnia.unison.mx:article/1134
Acceso en línea:https://biotecnia.unison.mx/index.php/biotecnia/article/view/1134
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:Ni-salphen
Zn-salphen
agricultural soil
N-cycle
abiotic disturbance
suelo agrícola
perturbación abiótica
M-Salfen
Descripción
Sumario:Soil ecosystem provides fundamental services as biogeochemical cycle regulation. Nitrogen cycle is managed by the microbiota that it harbors and depends on the stability of the ecosystem to cope abiotic disturbances such as metal and metalloid contamination. High concentrations of nickel (Ni) and zinc (Zn) in agricultural soils are frequently related to the application of conventional farming practices, composting, irrigation and biosolids deposit, as well as wastewater polluted from the mining and thermoelectric industry. To better understand the effects of this kind of abiotic disturbance a microcosm, this study was performed with agricultural soil from the Coast of Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico and contaminated with Ni (II) and Zn (II) salphen complexes to evaluate their effect on the system, regarding the nitrogen cycle fluxes over time. The results obtained by spectrophotometric analyzes of the inorganic nitrogen pool, atomic absorption and pH revealed that the soil system functioning based on the nitrogen cycle was recovered 240 days after disturbances with M-salphen. This suggest the potential use of NiSB15 as a promoter to increase nitrate concentration at 60 days in conjunction with NiSA15 to increase ammonium concentration in agricultural soils contaminated with heavy metals.