4.4 Article

Chemical characteristics of degraded soils in Uzbekistan and remediation by cyanobacteria

Journal

NUTRIENT CYCLING IN AGROECOSYSTEMS
Volume 120, Issue 2, Pages 193-203

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10705-021-10140-x

Keywords

Cyanobacteria; Inorganic nitrogen; Soil EC; Salt-affected soil; Uzbekistan

Categories

Funding

  1. JSPS bi-lateral exchange program [JSPSBP1 20187406]

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Precipitation in Uzbekistan is limited, leading to widespread irrigation in local agriculture. However, inadequate drainage systems during irrigation result in soil salinization. Cyanobacteria, with their salt-tolerant and nitrogen-fixing abilities, have shown potential for bioremediation of salt-affected soil. Isolated cyanobacteria from Uzbekistan have demonstrated high tolerance to salinity, offering a promising solution for restoring degraded soils in the region.
Precipitation in Uzbekistan is limited, so irrigation must be used widely in local agriculture. However, irrigation is carried out with inadequate drainage systems that result in salt damage, as the re-accumulation of salt from irrigation water on the soil surface; thus, soil salinization becomes severe in irrigated agricultural areas. To address this problem, leaching has been recommended locally. Nevertheless, local farmers input excessive irrigation water, and inadequate drainage systems are attributed to salt damage. Cyanobacteria are salt-tolerant microorganisms with photosynthetic and N-2-fixing abilities, so inoculation of cyanobacteria into salt-affected soil would be effective for its bioremediation. In this study, we isolated cyanobacteria from several local soils in Uzbekistan and evaluated their salt tolerance. The soil electrical conductivity (EC) ranged from 19 to 1970 mS m(-1), and most of the soil had a high EC. Cyanobacteria isolated from Navoi in north-western Uzbekistan grew better under NaCl conditions than under conditions without NaCl. This result indicated that Navoi strains were able to grow under high EC conditions and could be used for salt-affected soil remediation. A pot experiment using the cyanobacterium Navoi strain was conducted to evaluate its restoration abilities in degraded salt-affected soil. Inoculating with the Navoi strain reduced salt stress to the same extent as leaching by decreasing soil Na+ and EC, which increased inorganic soil nitrogen by increasing soluble organic nitrogen from decomposed cyanobacteria in soil and fixing atmospheric nitrogen by cyanobacteria. These results suggested that cyanobacterial application might be effective for salt-affected soil remediation in Uzbekistan.

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