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Silver nanomaterials released from commercial textiles have minimal impacts on soil microbial communities at environmentally relevant concentrations

Authors :
Devon B. Gray
Denis M. O'Carroll
Anbareen J. Farooq
Vincent Gagnon
Kela P. Weber
David J. Patch
Mark Button
Iris Koch
Sarah J. Wallace
Source :
The Science of the total environment. 806(Pt 3)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Silver nanomaterials (Ag NMs) have been used in a variety of commercial products to take advantage of their antimicrobial properties. However, there are concerns that these AgNMs can be released during/after use and enter wastewater streams, potentially impacting aquatic systems or accumulating in wastewater biosolids. Biosolids, which are a residual of wastewater treatment processes, have been found to contain AgNMs and are frequently used as agricultural fertilizer. Since the function of soil microbial communities is imperative to nutrient cycling and agricultural productivity, it is important to characterize and assess the effects that silver nanomaterials could have in agricultural soils. In this study agricultural soil was amended with pristine engineered (PVP-coated or uncoated AgNMs), aged silver (sulphidized or released from textiles) nanomaterials, and ionic silver to determine the fate and toxicity over the course of three months. Exposures were carried out at various environmentally relevant concentrations (1 and 10 mg Ag/kg soil) representing between 30 to over 800 years of equivalent biosolid loadings. Over thirteen different methodologies and measures were used throughout this study to assess for potential effects of the silver nanomaterials on soil, including microbial community composition, average well colour development (AWCD) and enzymatic activity. Overall, the AgNM exposures did not exhibit significant toxic effects to the soil microbial communities in terms of density, activity, function and diversity. However, the positive ionic silver treatment (100 mg Ag/kg soil) resulted in suppression to microbial activity while also resulting in significantly higher populations of Frankia alni (nitrogen-fixer) and Arenimonas malthae (phytopathogen) as compared to the negative control (p < 0.05, Tukey HSD) which warrants further investigation.

Details

ISSN :
18791026
Volume :
806
Issue :
Pt 3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Science of the total environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....667cd54031458d3ab92c37c030934a05