4.7 Article

Phytoremediation of nitrate contamination using two halophytic species, Portulaca oleracea and Salicornia europaea

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 30, Pages 46127-46144

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-19139-5

Keywords

Nitrate; Selenium; Salt; Nitrate reductase; Phytoremediation; Denitrification

Funding

  1. University of Tabriz

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Nitrate, a common nitrogen fertilizer, can cause water and soil contamination and impact human health and aquatic ecosystems. This study focused on the phytoremediation capacity of two halophyte species, Portulaca oleracea and Salicornia europaea, for nitrate-contaminated water and soils. The results showed that P. oleracea had higher nitrate removal efficiency compared to S. europaea. Selenium and salt treatments enhanced nitrate removal in S. europaea, while salt treatment reduced parameters in P. oleracea. Selenium-assisted phytoremediation is a feasible strategy for both species, but the resulting biomass exceeds the permitted nitrate levels for forage crops, requiring other management strategies.
Nitrate is a common form of nitrogen fertilizer, and its excess application combined with easy leaching from agricultural fields causes water and soil contamination, hazards on human health, and eutrophication of aquatic ecosystems. Compared to other pollutants, the application of phytoremediation technology for nitrate-contaminated sites has received less attention. Nitrophilous halophyte species are suitable candidates for this purpose particularly by application of additional treatments for assisting nitrate accumulation. In this work, two annual halophyte species, Portulaca oleracea and Salicornia europaea were studied for their phytoremediation capacity of nitrate-contaminated water and soils. Plants were treated with three nitrate levels (2, 14, and 50 mM) combined with either selenium (10 mu M as Na2SeO4) or salt (100 mM NaCl) in the hydroponics and sand culture medium, respectively. A fast growth and production of higher biomass enables P. oleracea for higher nitrate removal compared with S. europaea in both experiments. In S. europaea, both selenium and salt treatments enhanced nitrate removal competence through increasing the biomass and nitrate uptake or assimilation capacity. Salt treatment, however, reduced these parameters in P. oleracea. Based on data, selenium-assisted phytoremediation of nitrate contamination is a feasible strategy for both species and S. europaea is better suited to nitrate-contaminated saline water and soils. Nitrate accumulation in both species, however, exceeds that of the permitted nitrate level in the forage crops suggesting that the phytoremediation byproducts could not be consumed and other management strategies should be applied to the residual biomass.

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