Abstract

Heavy metal bioavailability depends on metal fractions in soil. The impacts of mild wheat residue (<2mm) and incubation time on fractions of Cd were studied in two different spiked soils sampled from Hamadan and Lahijan, Iran with semiarid and temperate climates, respectively. Two factorial experiments were done in two soils polluted with 10μg Cd g(-1) soil separately. Organic matter (0 and 5% wheat straw) and soil incubation time (24 and 3600h) were factors examined in three replicates. The transformation of Cd from KNO3 extractable form to less available fractions was higher in semiarid soils with lower clay and OM contents and higher pH and carbonate contents compared to temperate soils. In polluted semiarid soils after 24h incubation, greater content of Cd was observed in residual (HNO3 extractable) (45%), carbonates associated (EDTA extractable) (34%), organic matter associated (NaOH extractable) (11%), and KNO3 extractable (10%) fractions, but in temperate soils, greater content of Cd was observed in KNO3 extractable (61%), HNO3 extractable (14%), EDTA extractable (13%), and NaOH extractable (12%) fractions. KNO3 extractable form of Cd was decreased, and NaOH extractable and HNO3 extractable forms of Cd were increased by addition of wheat residue to both soils. The initial decrease of added Cd from KNO3 extractable form to less mobile fractions in Hamadan soil was very interesting. But this change was not observed in Lahijan soil. Since contamination factor was significantly high in temperate soils compared to semiarid soils in all treatments, the risk of Cd environmental pollution in temperate region is considerably high.

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