4.7 Article

Biomass ash formulations as sustainable improvers for mining soil health recovery: Linking soil properties and ecotoxicity*

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 291, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.118165

Keywords

Soil remediation; Ecotoxicity assay; Model invertebrates; Ecosystem functions; Combined effects; Nutrient recycling; LIFE No_Waste Project

Funding

  1. European Commission [LIFE14 ENV/PT/000369]
  2. FCT/MCTES [UIDP/50017/2020+UIDB/50017/2020, SRFH/BD/115115/2016]
  3. ALTER-NET

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There is a growing need to recover degraded soils to restore ecosystem services, and using ash from residual forest biomass combustion in the pulp and paper industry can be a sustainable strategy for this purpose. The study found that stabilized materials from ash provided nutrients, organic matter, and alkalinity, correcting soil pH and reducing metal bioavailability, while controlling the release of soluble salts and chloride. This suggests that ash stabilization, formulation, and supplementation with organic matter could be sustainable strategies to restore degraded mining soils and recover ecological functions.
There is a growing need to recover degraded soils to restore their essential ecosystem services and limit damages of anthropic activities onto these systems. Safe and sustainable solutions for long-term recovery must be designed, ideally by recycling existing resources. Using ash from combustion of residual forest biomass at the pulp and paper industry is an interesting and sustainable strategy to recover mining soils. However, formulations must be found to limit the potential toxicity associated with soluble salts and chloride that ash contains. Here, we assessed the effectiveness of three field ash-based amendments for the recovery of three highly acidic soils from Portuguese abandoned mines. Three amendments were tested: an un-stabilized mixture of ash and biological sludge, granulated ash, and granulated ash mixed with composted sludge. One year after application in open field plots (in the scope of LIFE No_Waste project), soil health restoration was evaluated through (i) soil physicochemical characterization and (ii) soil habitat functions though standardized ecotoxicological tests. This study highlights that stabilized materials provided nutrients, organic matter and alkalinity that corrected soil pH and decreased metal bioavailability, while controlling the release of soluble salts and chloride from ash. This soil improvement correlated with improved soil model organisms' reproduction and survival. For similar amendment, the native soil properties studied (as soil native electrical conductivity) affected the level of organism response. This work provides evidence that ash stabilization, formulation and supplementation with organic matter could be sustainable strategies to restore highly degraded mining soils and to recover their ecological functions. It further highlights the importance of analyzing combined effects on soil physico-chemical properties and ecological function recovery to assess restoration strategy efficiencies in complex multi-stressor environments.

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