2 research outputs found
Soil bacterial flora and enzymatic activities in zinc and lead contaminated soil
Soil bacterial flora and enzymatic activities in lead and zinc
contaminated soil of Ishiagu, Nigeria were investigated. The
physicochemical properties measured showed that the mining pit had
acidic pH (5.6) which gradually increased till 7.5 in the control.
Organic matter was only 2.57mg/g in the pit but gradually reached
7.41mg/g in control. Pb concentration was higher at pit 360.52mg/g,
305.46mg/g at 5m away and lowest at control 36.16mg/g. Zn was
217.47mg/g at the pit, 176.32mg/g at 5m, 106.18mg/g at 10m and only
40.67mg/g at control. This showed a gradual fall away from the pit.
Major organisms at the pit were Pseudomonas and Bacillus species
(30% each) and Mocrococcus and Chromobacter species (20% each) E.
coli, Salmonella and Lactobacillus species, which occurred in the
control soil, were absent in the pit soil but occurred at various rates
in other soil samples. Bacterial prevalence, diversity, and bioload
were all high in the control, followed by 100m away while values
decreased significantly towards the pit. Soil enzymatic activities
correlated negatively with heavy metal concentration. This showed that
the higher the heavy metal concentration the lower the enzymatic
activities. Urease, dehydrogenase activity, hydrogen peroxidase and
polyphenol oxidase were adversely affected but alkaline phosphatase did
not show any significant effect
Soil bacterial flora and enzymatic activities in zinc and lead contaminated soil
Soil bacterial flora and enzymatic activities in lead and zinc
contaminated soil of Ishiagu, Nigeria were investigated. The
physicochemical properties measured showed that the mining pit had
acidic pH (5.6) which gradually increased till 7.5 in the control.
Organic matter was only 2.57mg/g in the pit but gradually reached
7.41mg/g in control. Pb concentration was higher at pit 360.52mg/g,
305.46mg/g at 5m away and lowest at control 36.16mg/g. Zn was
217.47mg/g at the pit, 176.32mg/g at 5m, 106.18mg/g at 10m and only
40.67mg/g at control. This showed a gradual fall away from the pit.
Major organisms at the pit were Pseudomonas and Bacillus species
(30% each) and Mocrococcus and Chromobacter species (20% each) E.
coli, Salmonella and Lactobacillus species, which occurred in the
control soil, were absent in the pit soil but occurred at various rates
in other soil samples. Bacterial prevalence, diversity, and bioload
were all high in the control, followed by 100m away while values
decreased significantly towards the pit. Soil enzymatic activities
correlated negatively with heavy metal concentration. This showed that
the higher the heavy metal concentration the lower the enzymatic
activities. Urease, dehydrogenase activity, hydrogen peroxidase and
polyphenol oxidase were adversely affected but alkaline phosphatase did
not show any significant effect