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  • Methane oxidation and abundance of methane oxidizers in tropical agricultural soil (vertisol) in response to CuO and ZnO nanoparticles contamination.

Methane oxidation and abundance of methane oxidizers in tropical agricultural soil (vertisol) in response to CuO and ZnO nanoparticles contamination.

Environmental monitoring and assessment (2014-02-08)
Santosh Ranjan Mohanty, Parul Rajput, Bharati Kollah, Dipanti Chourasiya, Archana Tiwari, Muneshwar Singh, A Subba Rao
ABSTRACT

There is worldwide concern over the increase use of nanoparticles (NPs) and their ecotoxicological effect. It is not known if the annual production of tons of industrial nanoparticles (NPs) has the potential to impact terrestrial microbial communities, which are so necessary for ecosystem functioning. Here, we have examined the consequences of adding the NPs particularly the metal oxide (CuO, ZnO) on CH4 oxidation activity in vertisol and the abundance of heterotrophs, methane oxidizers, and ammonium oxidizers. Soil samples collected from the agricultural field located at Madhya Pradesh, India, were incubated with either CuO and ZnO NPs or ionic heavy metals (CuCl2, ZnCl2) separately at 0, 10, and 20 μg g(-1) soil. CH4 oxidation activity in the soil samples was estimated at 60 and 100 % moisture holding capacity (MHC) in order to link soil moisture regime with impact of NPs. NPs amended to soil were highly toxic for the microbial-mediated CH4 oxidation, compared with the ionic form. The trend of inhibition was Zn 20 > Zn 10 > Cu 20 > Cu 10. NPs delayed the lag phase of CH4 oxidation to a maximum of 4-fold and also decreased the apparent rate constant k up to 50 % over control. ANOVA and Pearson correlation analysis (α = 0.01) revealed significant impact of NPs on the CH4 oxidation activity and microbial abundance (p < 0.0001, and high F statistics). Principal component analysis (PCA) revealed that PC1 (metal concentration) rendered 76.06 % of the total variance, while 18.17 % of variance accounted by second component (MHC). Biplot indicated negative impact of NPs on CH4 oxidation and microbial abundance. Our result also confirmed that higher soil moisture regime alleviates toxicity of NPs and opens new avenues of research to manage ecotoxicity and environmental hazard of NPs.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) oxide, 99.999% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) oxide, nanopowder, <50 nm particle size (TEM)
Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) oxide, powder, 99.995% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) oxide, powder, 99.99% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) oxide, powder, <10 μm, 98%
Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) oxide, needles, mixture of CuO and Cu2O, ACS reagent
Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) oxide, ACS reagent, ≥99.0%
Sigma-Aldrich
Zinc oxide, dispersion, nanoparticles, <100 nm particle size (TEM), ≤40 nm avg. part. size (APS), 20 wt. % in H2O
Supelco
Zinc oxide, analytical standard
Sigma-Aldrich
Zinc oxide, nanopowder, <100 nm particle size
Sigma-Aldrich
Zinc oxide, 99.99% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Zinc oxide, 99.999% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Zinc oxide, nanopowder, <50 nm particle size (BET), >97%
Sigma-Aldrich
Zinc oxide, ReagentPlus®, powder, <5 μm particle size, 99.9%
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Zinc oxide, nanowires, Length 1 um
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Zinc oxide, puriss., meets analytical specification of Ph. Eur., BP, USP, 99-100.5% (calc. for dried substance)
Sigma-Aldrich
Zinc oxide, puriss. p.a., ACS reagent, ≥99.0% (KT)