Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8853845 | Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Climate change may increase the pest infestation leading to intensive use of insecticides. However, the effect of insecticide and climate factors on soil methane (CH4) consumption is less understood. A laboratory experiment was carried out to evaluate the effect of temperature (15â¯Â°C, 35â¯Â°C, and 45â¯Â°C), moisture holding capacity (MHC) (60%, 100%), biochar (0%, 1%) and chlorpyrifos (0â¯ppm, 10â¯ppm) on CH4 consumption and microbial abundance in a tropical Vertisol of central India. Methane consumption rate k (ng CH4 consumed gâ1 soil dâ1) varied from 0.065â¯Â±â¯0.005 to 0.608â¯Â±â¯0.018. Lowest k was in 15â¯Â°C-60% moisture holding capacity (MHC)-no biochar and with 10â¯ppm chlorpyrifos. Highest k was in 35â¯Â°C-100% MHC-1% biochar and without (0â¯ppm) chlorpyrifos. Cumulative CO2 production (ng CO2 produced gâ1 soil dâ1) varied from 446â¯Â±â¯15 to 1989â¯Â±â¯116. Both CH4 consumption and CO2 production peaked in the treatment of 35â¯Â°C-100% MHC-1% biochar. Chlorpyrifos inhibited CH4 consumption irrespective of treatments. Abundance of 16S rRNA of eubacteria (à 106 gâ1 soil) varied from 2.33â¯Â±â¯0.58 to 85.67â¯Â±â¯7.00. Abundance of 16S rRNA genes representing Actinomycetes (à 104 gâ1 soil) varied from 7.67â¯Â±â¯1.53 and pmoA gene (Methanotrophs) (à 105 gâ1 soil) varied from 1.23â¯Â±â¯0.59 to 34.33â¯Â±â¯6.51. Chlorpyrifos inhibited abundance of heterotrophic bacteria and methanotrophs but stimulated actinomycetes. Biochar stimulated the CH4 consumption, CO2 production and microbial abundance. Study highlighted that use of chlorpyrifos under climate change factors may inhibit CH4 consumption but the use of biochar may alleviate the negative effect of the chlorpyrifos.
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Authors
Usha Ahirwar, Garima Dubey, Neera Singh, Santosh Ranjan Mohanty, Bharati Kollah,