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Toxicity of heavy metals to microorganisms and microbial processes in agricultural soils: a review.

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TLDR
In this article, a hypothesis is formulated to explain how microorganisms may become affected by gradually increasing soil metal concentrations and this is discussed in relation to defining safe or critical soil metal loadings for soil protection.
Abstract
An increasing body of evidence suggests that microorganisms are far more sensitive to heavy metal stress than soil animals or plants growing on the same soils. Not surprisingly, most studies of heavy metal toxicity to soil microorganisms have concentrated on effects where loss of microbial function can be observed and yet such studies may mask underlying effects on biodiversity within microbial populations and communities. The types of evidence which are available for determining critical metal concentrations or loadings for microbial processes and populations in agricultural soil are assessed, particularly in relation to the agricultural use of sewage sludge. Much of the confusion in deriving critical toxic concentrations of heavy metals in soils arises from comparison of experimental results based on short-term laboratory ecotoxicological studies with results from monitoring of long-term exposures of microbial populations to heavy metals in field experiments. The laboratory studies in effect measure responses to immediate, acute toxicity (disturbance) whereas the monitoring of field experiments measures responses to long-term chronic toxicity (stress) which accumulates gradually. Laboratory ecotoxicological studies are the most easily conducted and by far the most numerous, but are difficult to extrapolate meaningfully to toxic effects likely to occur in the field. Using evidence primarily derived from long-term field experiments, a hypothesis is formulated to explain how microorganisms may become affected by gradually increasing soil metal concentrations and this is discussed in relation to defining “safe” or “critical” soil metal loadings for soil protection.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Co-selection for antibiotic tolerance in Cu-polluted soil is detected at higher Cu-concentrations than increased Cu-tolerance

TL;DR: In this paper, the co-selection for antibiotic tolerance in Cu polluted soils was studied in a laboratory experiment, where leucine incorporation was used to estimate the bacterial community tolerance.
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The influence of water-soluble As(III) and As(V) on dehydrogenase activity in soils affected by mine tailings.

TL;DR: DHA bioassay combined with other microbial properties offers a good tool for evaluating soil microbial activity and status and is a suitable indicator of the oxidative capacity of soil microorganisms affected by tailings in an oxidizing environment; however, under reducing conditions, abiotic responses must also be studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contaminants at Former Manufactured Gas Plants: Sources, Properties, and Processes

TL;DR: In the course of industrialization in the 19th century, manufactured gas plant sites were built in almost every larger town in Europe and the United States, and coal tars and tar oils present in the subsurface are composed of a huge variety of organic compounds often possessing a high toxic potential as mentioned in this paper.
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Microbial biomass, respiration and diversity in ultramafic soils of West Dome, New Zealand

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured microbial properties of six ultramafic soils that ranged in heavy metal content to test whether microbial diversity would decrease and respiratory quotient (microbial respiration:biomass) increase due to the stress imposed by increasing metal content.
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Metal homeostasis in bacteria: the role of ArsR-SmtB family of transcriptional repressors in combating varying metal concentrations in the environment

TL;DR: The mechanisms of how ArsR–SmtB family regulates the intracellular bioavailability of metal ions both inside and outside of the host are discussed.
References
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An extraction method for measuring soil microbial biomass c

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Journal ArticleDOI

Diversity in tropical rain forests and coral reefs.

TL;DR: The commonly observed high diversity of trees in tropical rain forests and corals on tropical reefs is a nonequilibrium state which, if not disturbed further, will progress toward a low-diversity equilibrium community as mentioned in this paper.
Book

Plant Strategies and Vegetation Processes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present plant strategies in the established phase and the regenerative phase in the emerging phase, respectively, and discuss the relationship between the two phases: primary strategies and secondary strategies.
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Evidence for the existence of three primary strategies in plants and its relevance to ecological and evolutionary theory

TL;DR: A triangular model based upon the three strategies of evolution in plants may be reconciled with the theory of r- and K-selection, provides an insight into the processes of vegetation succession and dominance, and appears to be capable of extension to fungi and to animals.
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