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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 887: 164012, 2023 Aug 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37169192

ABSTRACT

Arsenic, Cd, and Pb environmental fate is influenced when the traditional permanent flooding rice production systems are replaced by water-saving and soil conservation practices, urging for additional strategies that avoid their bioaccumulation in rice grain. The aim of this two-years field study was to evaluate the effects of fresh and field-aged biochar on As, Cd, and Pb bioaccumulation, and on As speciation, in rice grain produced in different growing environments (flooding versus sprinkler and conventional tillage versus direct seeding). Biochar produced from holm-oak pruning residues (pyrolysis at 550 °C, 48 h), in a single application (28 Mg ha-1), reduced As bioaccumulation in rice grain in the permanent flooding system to non-quantifiable concentrations (e.g., from 0.178 mg kg-1 to <0.04 mg kg-1, for inorganic-As, respectively), an effect which remained under field-aging conditions, increasing rice commercial value. When adopting sprinkler irrigation, the undesirable increase in Cd bioaccumulation in rice, relatively to the anaerobic system, was counteracted by biochar application, reducing its bioaccumulation in kernels between 32 and 80 %, allowing a simultaneous control of metals and metalloids bioaccumulation in rice. The bioaccumulation of Pb was also prevented with biochar application, with a reduction in its concentration four- to 13-times, in all the management systems, relatively to the non-amended plots, under fresh biochar effects. However, Pb immobilization decreased with biochar field-aging, indicating that the biochar application may have to be repeated to maintain the same beneficial effect. Therefore, the present study shows that the implementation of sprinkler irrigation with holm-oak biochar could reduce the risk of heavy metals(loids) bioaccumulation in rice grains and, thereby, ensuring food safety aspects, particularly under fresh biochar effects.


Subject(s)
Oryza , Quercus , Soil Pollutants , Cadmium/analysis , Bioaccumulation , Oryza/chemistry , Lead , Soil/chemistry , Charcoal/chemistry , Soil Pollutants/analysis
2.
Plants (Basel) ; 12(3)2023 Jan 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36771555

ABSTRACT

Traditional rice (Oryza sativa L.) management (tillage and flooding) is unsustainable due to soil degradation and the large amount of irrigation water used, an issue which is exacerbated in the Mediterranean region. Therefore, there is a need to explore rice management strategies in order to improve water-use efficiency and ensure its sustainability. Thus, field experiments were conducted to determine the medium-term effects of different irrigation and tillage methods combined with a single compost application on water and rice productivity, as well as food safety in a semiarid Mediterranean region. The management systems evaluated were: sprinkler irrigation in combination with no-tillage (SNT), sprinkler irrigation in combination with conventional tillage (ST), which were implemented in 2015, and flooding irrigation in combination with conventional tillage (FT), and their homologues (SNT-C, ST-C, and FT-C) with single compost application in 2015. In reference to rice grain yield, the highest values were observed under ST treatment with 10 307 and 11 625 kg ha-1 in 2018 and 2019 respectively; whereas between FT and SNT there were no significant differences, with 8 140 kg ha-1 as mean value through the study. Nevertheless, sprinkler irrigation allowed saving 55% of the total amount of water applied in reference to flooding irrigation. Furthermore, the highest arsenic concentration in grains was found under FT but it decreased with compost application (FT-C) and especially with sprinkler irrigation, regardless of tillage management systems. However, sprinkler irrigation favors the cadmium uptake by plants, although this process was reduced under SNT in reference to ST, and especially under amended compost treatments. Therefore, our results suggested that a combination of sprinkler irrigation and compost application, regardless of the tillage system, could be an excellent strategy for rice management for the Mediterranean environment in terms of water and crop productivity as well as food safety.

3.
J Environ Manage ; 334: 117430, 2023 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36801681

ABSTRACT

Imazamox (IMZX) is a persistent herbicide having probable risks for non-target organisms in the environment and water contamination. Alternatives to conventional flooding rice production, including biochar amendment, may induce changes in soil properties which can greatly modify the environmental fate of IMZX. This two-year study is the first to evaluate how tillage and irrigation practices, with or without fresh or aged biochar (Bc), that are alternatives to conventional rice production impact IMZX's environmental fate. The treatments were: conventional tillage and flooding irrigation (CTFI), conventional tillage and sprinkler irrigation (CTSI), no-tillage and sprinkler irrigation (NTSI), and the corresponding Bc-amendment treatments (CTFI-Bc, CTSI-Bc, and NTSI-Bc). Fresh and aged Bc amendment decreased IMZX's sorption onto the soil in tillage treatments, with Kf values decreasing 3.7 and 4.2-fold (fresh case) and 1.5 and 2.6-fold (aged case) for CTSI-Bc and CTFI-Bc, respectively. The transition to sprinkler irrigation reduced IMZX persistence. Overall, Bc amendment also reduced chemical persistence with half-life values decreasing 1.6 and 1.5-fold for CTFI and CTSI (fresh year) and 1.1, 1.1, and 1.3-fold for CTFI, CTSI, and NTSI (aged year), respectively. Sprinkler irrigation reduced IMZX leaching by up to a factor of 2.2. The use of Bc as amendment led to a significant decrease in IMZX leaching only under tillage conditions, but notable in particular for the CTFI case where leaching losses were reduced in the fresh year from 80% to 34% and, in the aged year, from 74% to 50%. Hence the change in irrigation from flooding to sprinkler either alone or in combination with the use of Bc (fresh or aged) amendment could be considered an effective way to sharply mitigate IMZX contamination of water in environments where rice is grown, particularly in those managed with tillage.


Subject(s)
Oryza , Soil Pollutants , Soil/chemistry , Charcoal/chemistry , Water
4.
Plants (Basel) ; 11(24)2022 Dec 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36559566

ABSTRACT

Traditional rice (Oryza sativa L.) production by flooding is a source of greenhouse gases (GHG), especially methane. The high consumption of water, as well as the chemical and physical degradation caused by these traditional practices in rice soils, is promoting a decrease in rice production in the Mediterranean area. The aim of this study was to monitor GHG emissions and the net ecosystem carbon balance (NECB) from rice produced with sprinkler irrigation techniques and also assess the impact of olive mill waste compost (C-OW) application and tillage on GHG emissions and the NECB. A field experiment for irrigated rice production was implemented by considering four different treatments: (1) tillage (T); (2) no tillage-direct seeding techniques (DS); (3) application of C-OW followed by tillage (TC); and (4) application of C-OW followed by direct seeding (DSC). The C-OW was only applied in the first year at a dose of 80 Mg ha-1. GHG emissions were monitored over three years in these four treatments in order to estimate the direct (first year) and residual (third year) effects of such practices. The application of C-OW caused an increase of 1.85 times the emission of CO2-C in the TC-DSC compared to the T-DS in the first year. It is noteworthy that the TC treatment was the only one that maintained an emission of CO2-C that was 42% higher than T in the third year. Regardless of the treatments and year of the study, negative values for the cumulative CH4 were found, suggesting that under sprinkler irrigation, CH4 oxidation was the dominant process. A decrease in N2O emissions was observed under direct seeding relative to the tillage treatments, although without significant differences. Tillage resulted in an increase in the global warming potential (GWP) of up to 31% with respect to direct seeding management in the third year, as a consequence of the greater carbon oxidation caused by intensive tillage. DS presented a positive NECB in the accumulation of C in the soil; therefore, it provided a greater ecological benefit to the environment. Thus, under Mediterranean conditions, rice production through a sprinkler irrigation system in combination with direct seeding techniques may be a sustainable alternative for rice crops, reducing their GWP and resulting in a lower carbon footprint. However, the use of C-OW as an organic amendment could increase the GHG emissions from rice fields irrigated by sprinklers, especially under tillage conditions.

5.
Sci Total Environ ; 847: 157651, 2022 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35907526

ABSTRACT

Irrigation and tillage practice alternatives to conventional flooding production, with or without organic amendments, are attracting great interest to adapt rice cultivation to climate change. However, they can alter the behaviour of pesticides and their efficiency against weeds. A two-year field experiment was conducted to investigate how the environmental fate and the weed control efficiency (WCE) of bispyribac­sodium (BS) were influenced by biochar produced from holm oak prunings (BHO) testing both the fresh and the aged effects. The treatments were: flooding irrigation and tillage (FT), sprinkler irrigation and tillage (ST), sprinkler irrigation and no-tillage (SNT), and the corresponding homologues with BHO addition (FT-BHO, ST-BHO, and SNT-BHO, respectively). Fresh BHO amendment decreased the sorption of BS onto the soil in all treatments, while, after aging, it also decreased sorption in FT-BHO (1.3-fold) but increased it in SNT-BHO and ST-BHO (1.1-fold). BHO addition reduced BS persistence under non-flooding and flooding incubation conditions, except for FT under the former condition for which t1/2 increased ≈1.5-fold in both years. The addition of BHO led to a decrease in BS leaching from 58.3 % and 44.6 % and from 70.4 % and 58.1 % in ST and FT to 50.1 % and 38.3 % and 63.6 % and 50.3 % in the homologue amended soils for the fresh and aged years, respectively. While fresh BHO addition decreased the WCE of BS in SNT-BHO, ST-BHO, and FT-BHO on average by a factor of 1.5, with aged BHO there was only such a decrease (by a factor of 1.4) in FT-BHO. The use of BHO could be effective for reducing water contamination by BS in flooding or sprinkler irrigation rice farming as long as conventional tillage is used. But it may also contribute to greatly reducing the herbicide's efficiency, although with time to allow aging, this reduction would only persist under conventional flooding production.


Subject(s)
Herbicides , Oryza , Pesticides , Soil Pollutants , Benzoates , Charcoal , Pyrimidines , Soil , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Water
6.
Sci Total Environ ; 835: 155488, 2022 Aug 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35476948

ABSTRACT

Sprinkler irrigation has been successfully introduced in rice production as an alternative to the traditional flooding system, allowing water savings and the reduction of As accumulation in the grain. However, the same conditions can increase Cd mobility and grain accumulation, an effect that needs to be countered. A 3-year field experiment was set-up in a Mediterranean region (Extremadura, Spain), to evaluate how the application of compost from olive mill waste (single application, 80 t ha-1), influences the accumulation of As and Cd in the grain under different irrigation regimes. Accumulation of As in the grain was always lower in the sprinkler irrigation when compared with the flooding irrigation, reaching a 5-fold difference in the third year. Compost application did not evidence a clear effect on the As accumulation in the rice grain, but highly significant negative correlations (p < 0.001) were obtained between As content in the grain (total, inorganic, and organic) and the humification parameters in the soil, evidencing the importance of using a mature and stable organic amendment to avoid As accumulation in the grain. Cadmium accumulation in the rice grain decreased in each treatment where compost was applied, relatively to the non-treated counterpart (e.g., from 0.080 to <0.010 mg kg-1, in direct seeding with sprinkler irrigation, in the third year). There were no significant differences in the total inorganic As between treatments with or without compost application, but it was possible to observe an increase in the predominance of the organic As over the more toxic inorganic As, when compost was applied, allowing a decrease in the risk associated to As accumulation. Therefore, the aerobic cultivation of rice, with the simultaneous application of an adequate source of organic matter, can be considered a good solution to cope with the risk of accumulation of As and Cd in the rice grain.


Subject(s)
Arsenic , Composting , Olea , Oryza , Soil Pollutants , Arsenic/analysis , Cadmium/analysis , Edible Grain/chemistry , Soil , Soil Pollutants/analysis
7.
Sci Total Environ ; 707: 136000, 2020 Mar 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31863981

ABSTRACT

A field experiment covering three years was conducted to evaluate how composted olive mill sludge (OS) influenced MCPA's environmental fate in rice soils under six combinations of tillage and irrigation cultivation techniques: tillage and sprinkler irrigation without (TS) or with (TSOS) the addition of OS (80 Mg ha-1), no-tillage and sprinkler irrigation without (NTS) or with (NTSOS) OS, and tillage and continuous flooding without (TF) or with (TFOS) OS. The measurements made in the first and third years after OS application were taken to constitute the "direct" and "residual" effects, respectively. After OS amendment, Kd (partition coefficients) values in the direct year were lower by factors of 1.1, 1.3, and 1.9 in TSOS, NTSOS, and TFOS, respectively, relative to the corresponding unamended soils, and in the residual year by factors of 1.1 and 1.5 in TSOS and NTOS, but greater by a factor of 1.5 in TFOS, than in the corresponding unamended soils, respectively. The dissipation of MCPA was very fast under both anaerobic (t1/2 = 1.80-5.29 d) and aerobic (t1/2 = 2.23-9.42 d) incubation conditions. The field application of OS led to a decrease in MCPA persistence under both incubation conditions, especially in the TF case. However, while under aerobic conditions the half-life (t1/2) decreased after OS addition in the direct and residual years, under anaerobic condition it only decreased in the direct year. While the application of OS in TS and NTS led to less leaching of MCPA, in TF it led to 1.4 and 1.2 times more leaching losses of the herbicide for the direct and residual years, respectively. Therefore, the use of OS in rice production could be considered an effective strategy for reducing water contamination by MCPA in at least the short- and medium-terms after its application, but only under non-flooding crop management regimes irrespective of the tillage practice implemented.


Subject(s)
Olea , Oryza , 2-Methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic Acid , Sewage , Soil , Soil Pollutants , Water Pollution
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