JOURNAL ARTICLE

CHEMISTRY OF PLANTS AND RECLAIMED GROUNDS ON SODA WASTE SITE AT JANIKOWO

J. SiutaJ. Sienkiewicz

Year: 2014 Journal:   DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)

Abstract

The paper presents the state of soda waste dumping site prior to reclamation, including the initial vegetation and properties of local grounds, the chemistry of plants colonizing the alkaline grounds in 2013 as well as the comparison of mineral element contents in leaves of trees spontaneously growing on the soda waste site in the years 2000 and 2013. The paper consists an integral part of a wider work concerning the effectiveness of sewage sludge application for bioremediation of highly saline and alkaline waste at the Janikowo Soda Plant. The spontaneous vegetation on soda waste in 2000 was scarce and patchy, its development conditioned by local microrelief where depressions provided water for plant establishment. The main species entering the site included grasses (Lolium perenne, Calamagrostis epigeios) and herbs (Reseda lutea, Tussilago farfara and Picris hieracioides). The physico-chemical properties of waste grounds varied widely both horizontally and spatially. In 2013, the reclaimed dumping site was covered by a well-established meadow-likevegetation and the soil top layer (0–5 cm) contained 9.2–13.9% Ca and 15–161 mg Cl/kg, at pH 7.6–7.8. The underlying 10–20 cm layer contained 21.1–63.3% Ca and 204–3110 mg Cl/kg, at pH 7.93–9.04. In the deeper 40-60 cm layer there was found 30.0-37.5% Ca and 9 920-16 320 mg Cl/kg, at pH 11.5–12.1. The vegetation growing in the vicinity of soil profiles contained: 1.65–3.36% N; 0.25–0.43% P; 1.38–2.95% K; 0.33–1.10 % Ca and 0.13–0.54% Mg. The contents of heavy metals in plants approximated the average amounts found in meadow clippings in Poland. The contents of main nutrients in leaves of trees spontaneously growing on the waste site were significantly higher in 2013 (2.70–3.21% N; 0.25–0.34% P and 0.98–1.75% K) than in the year 2000 (1.70–2.04% N; 0.11–0.21% P and 0.54–0.80% K). The application of sewage sludge and subsequent fertilization of vegetation on waste dumping site has considerably improved the status of nutrient supply in plants.

Keywords:
Land reclamation Waste management Environmental science Chemistry Archaeology Engineering Geography

Metrics

2
Cited By
0.36
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
3
Refs
0.73
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Botany and Plant Ecology Studies
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Plant Science
Integrated Water Resources Management
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Water Science and Technology
Waste Management and Environmental Impact
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering

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