Estimation of baseline levels of bacterial community tolerance to Cr, Ni, Pb, and Zn in unpolluted soils, a background for PICT (pollution-induced community tolerance) determination
DATE:
2021-11-30
UNIVERSAL IDENTIFIER: http://hdl.handle.net/11093/4544
EDITED VERSION: https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s00374-021-01604-x
UNESCO SUBJECT: 2511.04 Química de Suelos ; 3308 Ingeniería y Tecnología del Medio Ambiente ; 2511.09 Microbiología de Suelos
DOCUMENT TYPE: article
ABSTRACT
The PICT method (pollution-induced community tolerance) can be used to assess whether changes in soil microbial response
are due to heavy metal toxicity or not. Microbial community tolerance baseline levels can, however, also change due to variations in soil physicochemical properties. Thirty soil samples (0–20 cm), with geochemical baseline concentrations (GBCs)
of heavy metals and from fve diferent parent materials (granite, limestone, schist, amphibolite, and serpentine), were used
to estimate baseline levels of bacterial community tolerance to Cr, Ni, Pb, and Zn using the leucine incorporation method.
General equations (n=30) were determined by multiple linear regression using general soil properties and parent material
as binary variables, explaining 38% of the variance in log IC50 (concentration that inhibits 50% of bacterial growth) values
for Zn, with 36% for Pb, 44% for Cr, and 68% for Ni. The use of individual equations for each parent material increased the
explained variance for all heavy metals, but the presence of a low number of samples (n=6) lead to low robustness. Generally, clay content and dissolved organic C (DOC) were the main variables explaining bacterial community tolerance for the
tested heavy metals. Our results suggest that these equations may permit applying the PICT method with Zn and Pb when
there are no reference soils, while more data are needed before using this concept for Ni and Cr.