Soil fertilization with microalgae biomass from municipal wastewater treatment causes no additional leaching of dissolved macronutrients and trace elements in a column experiment

Author:

Weigand Harald1ORCID,Velten Hermann1,Düring Rolf‐Alexander2,Chifflard Peter3,Rohnke Marcus4ORCID,Weintraut Timo4,Heusch Steffen1,Theilen Ulf1

Affiliation:

1. Competence Center for Sustainable Engineering and Environmental Systems (ZEuUS) THM University of Applied Sciences Giessen Germany

2. Institute of Soil Science and Soil Conservation, Research Centre for BioSystems, Land Use and Nutrition (iFZ) Justus Liebig University Giessen Giessen Germany

3. Department of Geography Philipps‐Universität Marburg Marburg Germany

4. Institute for Physical Chemistry and Center for Materials Research Justus Liebig University Giessen Giessen Germany

Abstract

AbstractMicroalgae are a promising bio‐fertilizer that can be cultivated in municipal wastewater, where the organisms perform water purification by incorporation of nutrients and contaminants. Before bio‐fertilization with wastewater‐grown microalgae can be put into practice, its impact on the leaching of macronutrients and trace elements needs to be evaluated. Here, we studied the leaching behavior of a microalgae‐fertilized soil against a control in column percolation setup. Microalgae were grown in real municipal wastewater supplemented with bromide for the analysis of within‐cell Br accumulation by time‐of‐flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. Dry biomass (45.0 g N kg−1 and 28.9 g P kg−1) was added to the topmost layer of the fertilized column at a level of 3 g biomass kg−1 on a whole soil basis. Column irrigation was equivalent to 3 years of precipitation in central Germany. The leaching of macronutrients and trace elements from the fertilized and control columns was largely identical. Except for P, depth profiles confirmed very low vertical translocation within the soil. This is held for total element contents as well as for operationally defined pools, suggesting that microalgae cultivated in municipal wastewater provide a slow‐release fertilizer largely resistant to leaching. Mass spectrometric imaging gave clear evidence for bromide uptake by the microalgae, and pure cultures of the genus Scenedesmus showed that it was preferentially located in the cell membrane. Therefore, bromide could potentially be employed as a mineralization tracer in future studies on the use of microalgae as a bio‐fertilizer.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Reference28 articles.

1. The potential of wastewater grown microalgae for agricultural purposes: Contaminants of emerging concern, heavy metals and pathogens assessment

2. The Microalgal Cell

3. BMEL/BMU. (2020).Nitrate report 2020 Joint report of the federal ministries for the environment nature conservation and nuclear safety and for food and agriculture. (In German).https://www.bmuv.de/download/nitratberichte

4. High rate algal pond systems for low-energy wastewater treatment, nutrient recovery and energy production

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