2012
DOI: 10.1155/2012/395453
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Soil Application of Tannery Land Plaster: Effects on Nitrogen Mineralization and Soil Biochemical Properties

Abstract: Tannery land plaster (TLP) is a byproduct of lime hydrolysis of leather shavings. Its use in agriculture (organic C ≈ 17%, N ≈ 6% dm) could represent an alternative to landfill or incineration, but the high Cr(III) content (≈5% dm) makes it necessary to evaluate the effect on soil biochemical properties. TLP was therefore added at the rates of 220 and 440 kg of N ha −1 to 2 agricultural soils and incubated for 56 days under controlled conditions. Extractable NH 4 + -N and NO 3 − -N, CO 2 -C evolution, microbia… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
(33 reference statements)
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“…Additionally, SIR may indicate active microbial biomass (Svensson and Friberg 2007) and both microbial biomass and toxicity in soils (Martí et al 2007). The increases in SMB and SIR with the addition of 5 Mg ha −1 CTS after 5 years most likely occurred due to the permanent addition of C sources that favoured the soil microorganisms, as reported previously (Ros et al 2006;Santos et al 2011;Giacometti et al 2012). In addition, our results show that soil microorganisms remained active after CTS amendment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 76%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Additionally, SIR may indicate active microbial biomass (Svensson and Friberg 2007) and both microbial biomass and toxicity in soils (Martí et al 2007). The increases in SMB and SIR with the addition of 5 Mg ha −1 CTS after 5 years most likely occurred due to the permanent addition of C sources that favoured the soil microorganisms, as reported previously (Ros et al 2006;Santos et al 2011;Giacometti et al 2012). In addition, our results show that soil microorganisms remained active after CTS amendment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 76%
“…Previous short-term studies were completed under controlled laboratory conditions and evaluated the effects of different composted industrial wastes on soil microbial properties (Araújo and Monteiro 2006;Araújo et al 2007;Santos et al 2011;Giacometti et al 2012). Usually, the results showed positive effects of composted waste on soil microbial properties, suggesting no toxic or detrimental effects of the waste application on soil.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Increasing amounts of solid fertilizers applied to soil lead to a negligible rise in soil soluble Cr [2,[45][46][47]. Moreover it was demonstrated that the amount of Cr leached from soil is insignificant [45,48]. Chromium is generally insoluble in soil even when it is released during the mineralization of the organic matter [2,47,48].…”
Section: Agronomical and Environmental Aspectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover it was demonstrated that the amount of Cr leached from soil is insignificant [45,48]. Chromium is generally insoluble in soil even when it is released during the mineralization of the organic matter [2,47,48]. The organic constituents of the solid fertilizers play an important role in reducing the amount of Cr available to plants [49].…”
Section: Agronomical and Environmental Aspectsmentioning
confidence: 99%