Evaluation of the leucine incorporation technique for detection of pollution-induced community tolerance to copper in a long-term agricultural field trial with urban waste fertilizers

Jonas Duus Stevens Lekfeldt, Jakob Magid, Peter Engelund Holm, Ole Nybroe, Kristian Koefoed Brandt*

*Corresponding author for this work
23 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Copper (Cu) is known to accumulate in agricultural soils receiving urban waste products as fertilizers. We here report the use of the leucine incorporation technique to determine pollution-induced community tolerance (Leu-PICT) to Cu in a long-term agricultural field trial. A significantly increased bacterial community tolerance to Cu was observed for soils amended with organic waste fertilizers and was positively correlated with total soil Cu. However, metal speciation and whole-cell bacterial biosensor analysis demonstrated that the observed PICT responses could be explained entirely by Cu speciation and bioavailability artifacts during Leu-PICT detection. Hence, the agricultural application of urban wastes (sewage sludge or composted municipal waste) simulating more than 100 years of use did not result in sufficient accumulation of Cu to select for Cu resistance. Our findings also have implications for previously published PICT field studies and demonstrate that stringent PICT detection criteria are needed for field identification of specific toxicants.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEnvironmental Pollution
Volume194
Pages (from-to)78-85
Number of pages8
ISSN0269-7491
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Keywords

  • Bacterial community
  • Bioreporter
  • Cu-ion selective electrode
  • Metal speciation
  • Metal tolerance

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