Combined use of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and alkaline lignin enhance phosphorus nutrition and alleviate cadmium stress in lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.)
The excessive application of phosphorus (P) fertiliser and its poor utilisation efficiency have led to significant amounts of P being retained in agricultural soils in unavailable forms. The application of alkaline lignin to soil and its inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) have both been shown to improve plant P nutrition. However, their combined effects on soil P transformation remain unclear, particularly in cadmium (Cd)-contaminated soils. A potting experiment was conducted to examine the combined effects of AMF and alkaline lignin on soil P and Cd bioavailability and on the uptake of P and Cd by lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) that were grown for 56 d in a growth chamber. Combined AMF and alkaline lignin treatment increased soil P availability and alkaline phosphatase activity. It furthermore increased bioavailable Cd concentrations of rhizosphere and bulk soils by 48 % and 72 %, respectively, and the Cd concentration in roots by 85 %, but the Cd concentration was not affected in the edible parts (shoots) of the lettuce. Moreover, the combined treatment increased shoot biomass by 26–70 % and root biomass by 99–164 %. Our findings suggested that the combined use of AMF and alkaline lignin mobilised both P and Cd in soil but did not increase the accumulation of Cd in the shoots of plants growing in Cd-contaminated soils, these results would provide guideline for increasing Cd tolerance of plants and their yield.