Sulfur nanoparticles enhance Cd-phytoremediation in Salix chaenomeloides via alleviating phytotoxicity and modulating rhizosphere microbiota.
Wang Y, Xu Y, Cao Y, Ma C, Cai Z
Phytoremediation
PubMedContaminated soil near industrial areas, old farms, and urban parks can silently poison the food we grow and the water we drink — and this research shows that treating willows with a simple sulfur compound could help clean that soil naturally, without digging it up.
Scientists found that tiny sulfur particles help willow trees pull the toxic metal cadmium out of polluted soil much more efficiently. The sulfur particles act like a shield, reducing the internal damage the metal causes to the tree while also boosting helpful soil bacteria that support the cleanup process. Essentially, the willows become better pollution-fighters when given this sulfur boost.
Key Findings
Sulfur nanoparticles increased willow above-ground biomass by up to 28.6% and root biomass by up to 49.5% compared to cadmium-stressed plants with no treatment.
Sulfur nanoparticles reduced markers of oxidative cell damage (malondialdehyde and superoxide anion) by up to 23.8% and 84.5% respectively, outperforming conventional sulfate treatments.
Sulfur nanoparticle treatment significantly increased the abundance of cadmium-tolerance and sulfur-cycling genes in the root-zone soil microbiome, which correlated with greater cadmium uptake and transport into plant shoots.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Sulfur nanoparticles help willow trees absorb cadmium — a toxic heavy metal — from contaminated soil more effectively, while also protecting the trees from the damage cadmium causes. This offers a natural, low-cost approach to cleaning up polluted land.
Abstract Preview
Sulfur application can enhance plant tolerance to toxic metal stress, but the the underlying physiological and microecological mechanisms in woody plants remain poorly understood. In this study, Sa...
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Willows, also called sallows and osiers, of the genus Salix, comprise around 350 species of typically deciduous trees and shrubs. They are primarily found on moist soils in cold and temperate regions.