Abstract

Biochar adsorption and microbial remediation have great potential in the field of soil remediation, but since both are stressed by high concentrations of toxic heavy metals when applied alone, combining the two may become an effective remediation method. In this study, the application effect of phosphorus-solubilizing bacteria (PSB) combined with rice husk biochar on the remediation of Pb/Cd-mixed pollution and the form differences of toxic metal were studied qualitatively and quantitatively. Compared with the contaminated soil, the combined remediation of biochar and PSB significantly increased the pH, carbon and phosphorus by 9.0%, 299.4% and 157.0%. Meanwhile, combined remediation increased the total microbial, bacterial and fungal biomass by 92.11%, 103.13% and 138.10%. This confirmed that the addition of biochar increased the soil nutrients and provided good conditions for PSB or native microorganisms to flourish. The extraction results showed that the stable form of Pb/Cd with biochar + PSB was better than that with biochar/PSB alone. Combined remediation significantly increased the acid-soluble and non-bioavailable fraction of Pb/Cd by 5/15 times and 14/5.8 times in contaminated soil. The acid-soluble and non-bioavailable fractions are the main fraction of toxic metals after combined remediation (>80%). The acid-soluble and non-bioavailable fractions were mainly carbonates and phosphate-based Pb/Cd minerals (XRD analysis). PCA and a GWB model further confirmed that the release of pH and phosphorus was the key to the passivation of Pb/Cd in a short time. Meanwhile, the combination of the biochar (phosphorus supply guarantee) and PSB (acid-soluble phosphorus function) can reduce soil acidification and improve soil nutrients, thus increasing microbial abundance in contaminated soil, even more than that in non-contaminated soil.

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