Biochar-based nutritional nanocomposites: a superior treatment for alleviating salt toxicity and improving physiological performance of dill (Anethum graveolens).
Kazem Ghassemi-GolezaniSaeedeh RahimzadehPublished in: Environmental geochemistry and health (2022)
Biochar-supported metal oxide nanocomposites as functional materials could help to improve the production and stress tolerance of plants by enhancing the physicochemical properties of biochar. This experiment was carried out to assess the effects of unmodified biochar (30 g kg -1 soil) and biochar-based nanocomposites (BNCs) of iron (30 g BNC-FeO kg -1 soil), zinc (30 g BNC-ZnO kg -1 soil), and a combined form (15 g BNC-FeO + 15 g BNC-ZnO kg -1 soil) on dill (Anethum graveolens L.) plants under various salinity levels (non-saline, 6 and 12 dS m -1 ). The biochar-related treatments reduced sodium content of the plants, leading to a decline in osmolytes, antioxidant enzymes activities, reactive oxygen species (ROS), lipid peroxidation, NADP reduction, abscisic acid, jasmonic acid, and salicylic acid in dill leaf tissues. The combined form of BNCs reduced sodium content of leaf tissue by about 22% and 26% under 6 and 12 dS m -1 salinities, respectively. In contrast, addition of biochar, particularly biochar-based nanocomposites to the saline soil, enhanced potassium, iron, and zinc contents of leaf tissue, photosynthetic pigments, leaf water content, oxygen evolution rate, hill reaction and ATPase activities, endogenous indole-3-acetic acid, plant organs biomass, and consequently essential oil yield of plant organs. The combined form of BNCs in comparison with unmodified biochar improved vegetative, inflorescence, and seed biomass under 12 dS m -1 salinity by about 33%, 25%, and 6%, respectively. These findings revealed that BNCs with novel structure can potentially enhance salt tolerance, plant biomass, and essential oil yield of different organs in salt-stressed dill plants through decreasing leaf sodium content and ROS generation and increasing nutrient availability, water status, and photosynthetic pigments.
Keyphrases
- plant growth
- anaerobic digestion
- heavy metals
- sewage sludge
- reactive oxygen species
- essential oil
- organic matter
- reduced graphene oxide
- risk assessment
- oxidative stress
- microbial community
- cell death
- dna damage
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance imaging
- carbon nanotubes
- quantum dots
- gold nanoparticles
- combination therapy
- contrast enhanced
- replacement therapy
- anti inflammatory