4.7 Article

Quantitative relationship between earthworms' sensitivity to organic pollutants and the contaminants' degradation in soil: A meta-analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 429, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.128286

Keywords

Meta-analysis; Earthworms; Organic pollutant; Toxicology; Bioremediation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41771350, 42077106]
  2. Young Elite Scientists Sponsors Hip Program by CAST [2018QNRC001]

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Using earthworms to remove soil organic pollutants is a common bioremediation method. The meta-analysis reveals that earthworms have an average effect size of 128.5% on organic pollutant degradation, and soils with high organic matter or clay textures are more conducive to the removal of organic pollutants by earthworms.
Using earthworms to remove soil organic pollutants is a common bioremediation method. However, it remains challenging to evaluate and predict their effect on removing soil organic pollutants based on earthworm toxicology and pollutant degradation rates. Peer-reviewed journal articles on ecotoxicology and bioremediation from the years 1974-2020 (cutoff date September 2020) were selected for meta-analysis to quantify the effect size of earthworms on organic pollutant degradation. The meta-analysis shows that the average effect size of earthworms on organic pollutant degradation is 128.5% (p < 0.05). Soils with high soil organic matter or clay textures are more conducive to earthworm-mediated removal of organic pollutants. Structural equation modeling reveals that earthworms' sensitivity to contaminant exposure may be a greater limiting factor on pollutant degradation than environmental factors. In addition, the quantitative relationship existed between LC50 and the pollutants' degradation that an elevated LC50 threshold resulted in at least 1.5 times increase in the pollutants' degradation size. This correlation was dually confirmed via meta-analysis and the validation trial. The results of this study contribute to a more profound understanding of the potential to use earthworms to mitigate organic pollution in soils and develop earthworm-based soil remediation techniques on a global scale.

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