Kaur, Ispreet ; Gaur, Vivek Kumar ; Regar, Raj Kumar ; Roy, Aditi ; Srivastava, Pankaj Kumar ; Gaur, Rajeev ; Manickam, Natesan ; Barik, Saroj Kanta (2021) Plants exert beneficial influence on soil microbiome in a HCH contaminated soil revealing advantage of microbe-assisted plant-based HCH remediation of a dumpsite Chemosphere, 280 . p. 130690. ISSN 0045-6535
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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.130690
Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.130690
Abstract
Persistence of hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) pesticide is a major problem for its disposal. Soil microflora plays an important role in remediating contaminated sites. Keeping concepts of microbial- and phyto-remediation together, the difference between soil microflora with and without association of HCH accumulating plant species was studied. Metagenomic analysis among the non-plant soil (BS) (∑HCH 434.19 mg/g), rhizospheric soil of shrubs (RSS) (∑HCH 157.31 mg/g), and rhizospheric soil of trees (RSD) (∑HCH 105.39 mg/g) revealed significant differences in microbial communities. Shrubs and trees occurred at a long-term dumpsite accumulated α- and β- HCH residues. Plant rhizospheric soils exhibited high richness and evenness with higher diversity indices compared to the non-plant soil. Order Rhizobiales was most abundant in all soils and Streptomycetales was absent in the BS soil. Proteobacteria and Ascomycota were highest in BS soil, while Actinobacteria was enriched in both the plant rhizospheric soil samples. In BS soil, Pseudomonas, Sordaria, Caulobacter, Magnetospirillum, Rhodospirillum were abundant. While, genera Actinoplanes, Streptomyces, Bradyrhizobium, Rhizobium, Azospirillum, Agrobacterium are abundant in RSD soil. Selected plants have accumulated HCH residues from soil and exerted positive impacts on soil microbial communities in HCH contaminated site. This study advocates microbe-assisted plant-based bioremediation strategy to remediate HCH contamination.
| Item Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Source: | Copyright of this article belongs to Elsevier Science. |
| ID Code: | 140766 |
| Deposited On: | 11 Nov 2025 14:15 |
| Last Modified: | 11 Nov 2025 14:15 |
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