Issue 12, 2021

Microbial response to copper oxide nanoparticles in soils is controlled by land use rather than copper fate

Abstract

Copper (Cu) products, including copper oxide nanoparticles (nCuO), are critically important agricultural fungicides and algaecides. Foliar application onto crops and subsequent aerosol drift of these Cu products, especially nCuO, on to soil may alter nutrient cycling and microbial communities in both managed and unmanaged environments. We measured the influence of land use on soil microbial biomass and respiration in response to the addition of nCuO to an alluvial soil. Different land uses included grassland, forest and both organic and conventional managed row crops. Soil samples were amended with 1000 mg Cu per kg soil as CuCl2, 16 nm CuO (16nCuO), 42 nm CuO (42nCuO), and larger than nanoparticle sized bulk CuO (bCuO). Copper availability immediately increased in all soils following Cu addition in the order of CuCl2 > 16nCuO > 42nCuO > bCuO. After 70 days Cu availability was diminished across land uses and lowest in soils treated with bCuO. Using X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy, we determined that the relatively high availability of Cu after treatment with nanoparticle sized CuO was due to the dissolution of CuO particles and subsequent adsorption by soil materials. Respiration, an indicator of microbial activity, was suppressed by Cu additions, especially CuCl2. Copper effects on soil microbial biomass were sensitive to land use. In agricultural soils, microbial biomass was unaltered by Cu form, regardless of concentration, whereas in unmanaged soils, it decreased following exposure to CuCl2 and 42nCuO. Our results suggest that land use history has little impact on Cu chemical fate in soils, but strongly modulates microbial response to Cu exposure. These results are especially important for organic agricultural systems where copper fungicides are widely used but may suppress microbial mineralization of nutrients from soil organic matter.

Graphical abstract: Microbial response to copper oxide nanoparticles in soils is controlled by land use rather than copper fate

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Jul 2021
Accepted
27 Oct 2021
First published
05 Nov 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Environ. Sci.: Nano, 2021,8, 3560-3576

Microbial response to copper oxide nanoparticles in soils is controlled by land use rather than copper fate

D. A. Rippner, A. J. Margenot, S. C. Fakra, L. A. Aguilera, C. Li, J. Sohng, K. A. Dynarski, H. Waterhouse, N. McElroy, J. Wade, S. R. Hind, P. G. Green, D. Peak, A. J. McElrone, N. Chen, R. Feng, K. M. Scow and S. J. Parikh, Environ. Sci.: Nano, 2021, 8, 3560 DOI: 10.1039/D1EN00656H

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