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Mitigation of sodium risk in a sandy agricultural soil by the use of natural zeolites.

Giacomo FerrettiDario Di GiuseppeBarbara FacciniMassimo Coltorti
Published in: Environmental monitoring and assessment (2018)
Na+ contamination of irrigation waters represents a global environmental issue for soil structure and plant production. Notwithstanding several techniques for the reduction of Na+ have been proposed in recent years, they generally exhibit disadvantages, including low recyclability and relatively high operational/maintenance costs. In this paper, we propose a natural and eco-friendly solution for the reduction of Na+ risk in coastal agricultural sandy soil (SS), vulnerable to salinity stress. A series of column leaching experiments have been conducted to assess the influence of Italian zeolite-rich tuff (natural zeolites, NZ) addition to soil (NZSS) on Na+ removal, SAR, and CROSS index, under three different salinity scenario. Result showed that the Na+ removal efficiency varied between 46.4 and 54.3% in soil amended with NZ, and analogously SAR index was significantly reduced from 7 to up 13 points. SAR and CROSS indexes resulted better correlated in SS rather than NZSS due to the influence of K+ released by NZ. In conclusion, soil amendment with NZ represents a natural and eco-friendly solution for increasing sandy soil resilience to Na+ risk.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • heavy metals
  • risk assessment
  • plant growth
  • human health
  • microbial community
  • sewage sludge
  • mass spectrometry
  • drinking water
  • heat stress