Abstract

Atrazine accumulation in agricultural soil is prone to cause serious environmental problems and pose risks to human health. Vermicomposting is an eco-friendly approach to accelerating atrazine biodegradation, but the roles of earthworm cast in the accelerated atrazine removal remains unclear. This work aimed to investigate the roles of earthworm cast in promoting atrazine degradation performance by comprehensively exploring the change in atrazine metabolites and bacterial communities. Our results showed that earthworm cast amendment significantly increased soil pH, organic matters, humic acid, fulvic acid and humin, and achieved a significantly higher atrazine removal efficiency. Earthworm cast addition also remarkably changed soil microbial communities by enriching potential soil atrazine degraders (Pseudomonadaceae, Streptomycetaceae, and Thermomonosporaceae) and introducing cast microbial degraders (Saccharimonadaceae). Particularly, earthworm casts increased the production of metabolites deethylatrazine and deisopropylatrazine, but not hydroxyatrazine. Some bacterial taxa (Gaiellaceaea and Micromonosporaceae) and humus (humic acid, fulvic acid and humin) were strongly correlated with atrazine metabolism into deisopropylatrazine and deethylatrazine, whereas hydroxyatrazine production was benefited by higher pH. Our findings verified the accelerated atrazine degradation with earthworm cast supplement, providing new insights into the influential factors on atrazine bioremediation in vermicomposting.

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