Abstract

Increasing rates of oil exploitation and utilization are associated with increasing rates of oil pollution in soil. Nematodes are abundant in soils with or without oil contamination, among which bacterial-feeding nematodes are the dominant group. However, their function in oil-contaminated soil is unclear. This study explores the effects of bacterial-feeding nematode and organic matter addition on microbial activity and oil degradation in contaminated soil. Experiments were conducted using six treatments of oil-contaminated soil: sterilized (Control), nematode-free (OC), nematode addition (OCN), nematode + wheat straw addition (OCNW), nematode + rapeseed cake addition (OCNR), and nematode + biochar addition (OCNB). At the end of a 168-day incubation experiment, the oil concentration of OCN soil was 26.77% lower than that of OC soil, and those of OCNW, OCNR, and OCNB were 12.83%, 27.81%, and 4.77% lower, respectively, than that of OCN soil. Over the experiment, soil microbial biomass carbon, fluorescein diacetate hydrolysis activity, and dehydrogenase activity increased by 4.35-382.30%, 1.75-302.22%, and - 2.73-224.55%, respectively, in oil-contaminated soils, with or without nematode and organic matter addition. These results suggest that the addition of organic matter and bacterial-feeding nematodes to oil-contaminated soil can promote the growth and activity of microorganisms that break down oil.

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