Abstract

Remediation of Cr-contaminated soils with biochar is an effective method, but its effect on plant detoxification has not been clarified, and the translocation pathways of different chemical forms of Cr in the soil–plant system have not been quantitatively evaluated. This study investigated the effects of magnetically modified Enteromorpha prolifera biochar (FBC) on Cr uptake, translocation and phytotoxicity in the soil and barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). When the FBC dosage increased to 30 g·kg−1, the content of bioavailable Cr in the soil decreased by 56.82%. Additionally, the contents of Cr in H. vulgare decreased by 53.22%, and growth recovered to the normal level. Partial least squares path modelling (PLS-PM) was applied to establish two influence paths to explain how FBC impacted the whole system of soil and plants upon Cr exposure. The phytotoxic effect path of Cr suggested that FBC decreased the contents of Cr in soil and H. vulgare and then recovered growth by alleviating oxidative stress (β = −0.45) and promoting chlorophyll synthesis (β = 0.53) in shoots. The translocation and conversion path of Cr further indicated that Cr in the shoots was converted into low-migration forms and mainly trapped in cell walls and vacuoles rather than in organelles, consequently decreasing the phytotoxicity of Cr (β = −0.73). These two soil–plant paths offer new insights into the application of biochar and plants in Cr-contaminated soils.

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