Bioremediation of selenium-contaminated soil using earthworm Eisenia fetida: Effects of gut bacteria in feces on the soil microbiome

Selenium (Se) contamination in the soil poses a food safety risk to humans. The present study was to investigate the role of earthworm Eisenia fetida in soil Se remediation. When exposed to selenite at 4 mg Se/kg, E. fetida efficiently concentrated Se in tissues (24.53 mg Se/kg dry weight), however,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2022-08, Vol.300, p.134544-134544, Article 134544
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Yikun, Wang, Zi-Jing, Huang, Jung-Chen, Chachar, Azharuddin, Zhou, Chuanqi, He, Shengbing
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Selenium (Se) contamination in the soil poses a food safety risk to humans. The present study was to investigate the role of earthworm Eisenia fetida in soil Se remediation. When exposed to selenite at 4 mg Se/kg, E. fetida efficiently concentrated Se in tissues (24.53 mg Se/kg dry weight), however, only accounting for a minor portion of the added Se. Microbial analysis shows 12 out of 15 functional genera became more abundant in the worm-inhabited soil when exposed to Se, suggesting E. fetida contributed to Se remediation mainly by introducing Se-reducing bacteria to the soil via feces, which were dominated by the genera Pseudomonas (∼62.65%) and Aeromonas (∼29.99%), whose abundance was also significantly boosted in the worm-inhabited soil. However, when isolated from worm feces at 200 mg Se/L, Pseudomonas strains only displayed a high tolerance to Se rather than removal capacity. In contrast, among 4 isolated Aeromonas strains, A. caviae rapidly removing 85.74% of the added selenite, mainly through accumulation (67.38%), while A. hydrophila and A. veronii were more effective at volatilizing Se (27.77% and 24.54%, respectively), and A. media performed best by reducing Se by ∼49.00% under anaerobic conditions. Overall, our findings have highlighted the importance of E. fetida as a key contributor of functional bacteria to the soil microbiome, building a strong foundation for the development of an earthworm-soil system for Se bioremediation. [Display omitted] •E. fetida endured Se(IV) at 4 mg Se/kg with the 86% survival and 33% growth rates.•E. fetida raised bacterial diversity/richness in the soil, with or without Se(IV).•12 out of 15 Se-reducing genera were boosted in the worm-inhabited soil with Se.•Pseudomonas and Aeromonas were dominant in feces and enhanced in soil by E. fetida.•4 Aeromonas strains isolated from feces removed ∼86% of the added selenite in 24 h.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.134544