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Trichoderma harzianum enhances lettuce biomass and modulates plant-soil emerging contaminant dynamics under reclaimed wastewater irrigation.

Brienza M, Peña-Herrera JM, Trotta V, Chiron S, Sauvêtre A

Phytoremediation

PubMed

Lettuce and other leafy greens grown with recycled wastewater can absorb trace amounts of pharmaceuticals from the soil — adding a common beneficial fungus to the soil may significantly reduce how much of those compounds end up on your plate.

Researchers grew lettuce using recycled wastewater that contained traces of a common seizure medication and an antifungal compound found in shampoos. When they added a helpful fungus to the soil, the lettuce plants grew larger and had noticeably less of those contaminants in their leaves. The fungus seemed to help break down the pollutants in the soil before the plants could absorb them, and it also boosted the plants' own natural defense chemistry.

Key Findings

1

Trichoderma harzianum inoculation increased lettuce biomass and altered defense-related phytohormones including salicylic acid in roots after 3 weeks of growth

2

Fungal treatment reduced concentrations of contaminant transformation products in plant leaves, shifting accumulation toward soil rather than plant tissue

3

The fungus did not significantly affect uptake of the parent compounds (carbamazepine and climbazole) themselves, but intercepted their breakdown products before plant absorption

chevron_right Technical Summary

A beneficial soil fungus (Trichoderma harzianum) helps lettuce grow bigger while also reducing the amount of pharmaceutical and antifungal pollutants that end up in the plant's leaves when crops are irrigated with recycled wastewater.

description

Abstract Preview

The use of wastewater for irrigation in agricultural soils offers a sustainable means to reduce freshwater consumption and recycle nutrients, but also poses contamination risks associated with emer...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 11 other discoveries — Lettuce phytoremediation, soil-health, crop-improvement +2 more 5 related articles

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