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Environmental impact of fertilizing soils by using sewage and animal wastes
Authors:G Benckiser  T Simarmata
Affiliation:(1) Institute of Microbiology, Justus-Liebig University, Senckenbergstr. 3, Giessen, FRG;(2) Department of Soil Science, University of Padjadjaran, Bandung, 45363 Jatinangar, West Java, Indonesia
Abstract:The European Community is producing annually about 300 × 106 tons of sewage sludges as well as about 150, 950,160 and 200 tons of domestic, agricultural, industrial and other wastes (street litter, dead leaves etc.). About 20–25% of the German sewage sludges, which contain in average about 3.8,1.6, 0.4, 0.6, 5.3% DM–1 N, P, K, Mg and Ca, 202, 5, 131, 349, 53, 3 and 1446 mg kg–1 DM Pb, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Hg, Zn as well as ca. 37 and 5 mg kg–1 Dm polychlorinated hydrocarbons and biphenyls, are recycled annually as fertilizer. In addition environmental impacts on the arable land of Germany may derive from 76,19.2, 64.7, 33.6, 7.8 and 0.1 kg ha–1 a–1 of N, P, K, Ca, Mg and Cu added as animal manures. Besides heavy metals and hazardous organics pathogens are disseminated with organic wastes.Crop production and soil fertility generally profit from the considerable amounts of plant nutrients and carbon in sewage sludges, animal slurries and manures, but the physicochemical soil properties, the composition of microbial, faunal and plant communities as well as the metabolic processes in the soil-, rhizo- and phyllosphere are changed by organic manuring. Consequences for the soil carbon-, nitrogen-and phosphorus-cycle are discussed. Impacts of heavy metals and hazardous organics on the soil biomass and its habitat as well as on transport mechanisms and surival times of disseminated pathogens in soils are reviewed with emphasis on the German situation. A proposal for future strategies (landscape recycling) is made.
Keywords:animal slurries and manures  applications to soils  carbon-  nitrogen-  phosphorus  contamination  crop production  dissemination  hazardous organics  heavy metals  inputs  macro- and micronutrients  pathogens  sewage sludges  survival-  transfer-  transport and adsorption rates in soils
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