Organic fertilizer regulates multispecies biofilm formation and structure to enhance Cd removal efficiency.
Jiang Y, Li Y, Zhao S, Liu S, Tang Y
Soil Health
Compost and organic amendments you add to garden beds don't just feed your plants — they're quietly recruiting and empowering communities of soil microbes that can lock away heavy metals before those metals reach your vegetables' roots.
Cadmium is a toxic metal that can build up in rice and other crops grown in contaminated soil, and it's very hard to get rid of. Scientists found that when they added organic fertilizer (like compost) to the soil, certain bacteria formed thicker, stickier colonies called biofilms that acted like tiny sponges, soaking up nearly 90% of the cadmium. The fertilizer changed which bacteria showed up and made the whole community better at protecting plants from the metal.
Key Findings
Organic fertilizer increased biofilm biomass by 49% compared to untreated control soil.
Biofilms from organically fertilized soil removed 88% of cadmium from solution, far exceeding control biofilm performance.
Low cadmium concentrations (0.2 mmol/L) actually stimulated biofilm growth, while higher concentrations reduced it — suggesting a hormetic response in the microbial community.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Adding organic fertilizer to cadmium-contaminated rice paddy soil dramatically boosts the ability of naturally occurring soil bacteria to form protective biofilms that capture and neutralize toxic cadmium — achieving 88% removal efficiency compared to untreated controls.
Abstract Preview
Cadmium (Cd) contamination of soil poses a risk to both environmental and agricultural safety. Although microbial biofilms have the potential to immobilize heavy metals, there is a lack of strategi...
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