Abstract

AbstractIn the present study, we assessed whether the nonadditive effects of mixed litter decomposition on soil biological and chemical properties, which was usually recognized in clean soils, could be used to enhance the efficiency of petroleum‐contaminated soil necrophytoremediation. In particular, six common plant species from the petroleum production region of Northern Shaanxi, China were collected, forming nine mixture types. The single and mixed litters were used to treat petroleum‐contaminated soil with a proportion of 45 g kg−1 at 25°C and a constant humidity for 150 days. The possible nonadditive effects on the efficiency of removing contaminants and recovering the damaged soil traits caused by the mixed litter addition were then investigated. The results indicate that monospecific litter treatments significantly increased the degradation rates of petroleum contaminants, the available N and P contents, and the catalase and dehydrogenase activities by 36%–74%, 28%–455%, and 8%–102%, respectively (p < 0.05). The mixed addition of the litters from Lespedeza davurica and Artemisia scoparia or those from Agropyron cristatum and Bromus inermis caused significant synergistic effects, enhancing the overall petroleum component removal, replenishing nutrients (particularly nitrogen) or stimulating enzymatic activities (especially for sucrase, phosphatase, catalase, and urease). The observed values of the corresponding indicators following mixed litter treatment were observed to significantly increase by 12%–18%, 23%–58%, and 9%–24% (p < 0.05), relative to their predicted values, which were calculated based on the observed values from the monospecific litter treatments and the proportion of the litter in the mixture. However, other litter combinations may weaken the remediation effects of the litter addition. In general, a high content of nutrients, primary metabolites (e.g., soluble sugars and amino acids), and the potential bio‐surfactants and co‐metabolized substrates (including terpenoids and flavonoids) of mixed litters enhanced the remediation efficiency of mixed litters. Notably, an increase in the chemical diversity of mixed litter may weaken its synergistic effects on the degradation of petroleum components and the simulation of soil polyphenol oxidase activity. Our results demonstrate that appropriate litter mixing combinations can effectively enhance the efficiency of necrophytoremediation, thus providing new approaches for the more convenient and economical remediation of petroleum‐contaminated soil.

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