Heating up biochar unlocks microbial power to trap toxic cadmium in soil
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Heating up biochar unlocks microbial power to trap toxic cadmium in soil

25/03/2026 TranSpread

Comparing kitchen-waste biochars revealed that high-temperature biochar creates stable conditions that enhance microbial-assisted cadmium (Cd) immobilization and limit crop uptake. In contrast, low-temperature biochar improves soil fertility but can stimulate microbial activity that increases cadmium availability.

Heavy metal contamination is an increasing global agricultural challenge driven by industrialization and long-term agrochemical use. Cd is especially concerning due to its high mobility, accumulation in crops, and risks to food safety and human health. Approximately 14–17% of global farmland is affected by toxic metals, emphasizing the need for sustainable remediation strategies. Biochar, a carbon-rich material derived from biomass, has attracted attention for its porous structure, stability, and metal-binding capacity. However, biochars produced at different temperatures exhibit distinct physicochemical properties, resulting in variable remediation performance. Growing evidence shows that soil microbes actively regulate metal behavior, yet how biochar properties shape microbial responses and cadmium stabilization remains unclear.

A study (DOI: 10.48130/ebp-0025-0019) published in Environmental and Biogeochemical Processes on 15 January 2026 by Quan Chen’s team, Kunming University of Science & Technology, reveals that successful heavy-metal remediation depends not only on material properties but also on carefully managing biochar–microbe interactions.

Using a controlled pot experiment, researchers amended cadmium-contaminated soil planted with Brassica chinensis using kitchen-waste biochar produced at 300, 500, and 700 °C, applied either alone or combined with Escherichia coli to simulate microbial intervention. They quantified rhizosphere total Cd, BCR sequential fractions (F1–F4), and plant uptake and translocation, while simultaneously characterizing soil and biochar physicochemical properties—including dissolved organic carbon (DOC), surface area, electrical conductivity (EC), FTIR functional groups, and enzyme activities—and profiling microbial communities through high-throughput sequencing and co-occurrence network analysis. After 70 days, rhizosphere total Cd decreased by 29.77–41.22% relative to the initial 1.31 mg kg⁻¹, indicating both natural migration and biochar-mediated adsorption that limited Cd leaching. Pyrolysis temperature strongly controlled Cd mobility: acid-extractable Cd (F1) declined by 4.22%, 13.44%, and 28.34% under KB300, KB500, and KB700, respectively, while bioavailable Cd (F1+F2) fell by 2.25%, 8.78%, and 22.25%, demonstrating that stabilization primarily resulted from suppressing the most mobile fraction. Plant responses mirrored these patterns. Low-temperature biochar reduced root Cd but increased leaf accumulation and root-to-leaf transport, suggesting enhanced mobilization driven by microbial activity and organic acid release. In contrast, 700 °C biochar promoted Cd retention in roots and reduced accumulation in aerial tissues, thereby lowering food-safety risks. Mechanistically, increasing pyrolysis temperature sharply reduced DOC (12.37 → 0.03 mg kg⁻¹) while expanding surface area (0.14 → 16.81 m² g⁻¹) and increasing soil EC by up to 142%, creating mineral-rich environments favorable for Cd precipitation and complexation. Microbial analyses revealed that high-temperature biochar decreased overall bacterial diversity but selectively enriched Cd-stabilizing taxa such as Bacillus, Rhodococcus, and Mucor, forming simpler yet more tightly connected ecological networks. Microbial inoculation further highlighted temperature-dependent biochar–microbe interactions: E. coli alone had minimal effects, but when combined with low-temperature biochar it increased Cd bioavailability and plant uptake, whereas coupling with high-temperature biochar reinforced immobilization and minimized Cd translocation to shoots. Together, the findings demonstrate that Cd stabilization arises from a temperature-governed synergy between biochar physicochemical properties and microbial community restructuring.

This study reveals that biochar acts as both a physicochemical stabilizer and a microbial regulator in cadmium-contaminated soils. Temperature-tailored biochar application, particularly high-temperature biochar derived from organic waste, enhances Cd immobilization, reduces crop contamination risks, and promotes soil health. Such selective strategies offer a sustainable pathway for safe farmland remediation and circular biomass utilization worldwide.

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References

DOI

10.48130/ebp-0025-0019

Original Source URL

https://doi.org/10.48130/ebp-0025-0019

Funding Information

This research was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2023YFC3709100), and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42130711, 42477245, 42377250, and 42407346).

About Environmental and Biogeochemical Processes

Environmental and Biogeochemical Processes is a multidisciplinary platform for communicating advances in fundamental and applied research on the interactions and processes involving the cycling of elements and compounds between the biological, geological, and chemical components of the environment.

Title of original paper: Selective application of biochars to realize biochar–microbe synergistic immobilization of soil cadmium
Authors: Yanqing Xiong1,2, Rongrong Lin1,2, Yafeng Wang1,2, Kai Liu3, Jiawen Guo3, Min Wu1,2, Quan Chen1,2, , , Patryk Oleszczuk4 & Bo Pan1,2
Journal: Environmental and Biogeochemical Processes
Original Source URL: https://doi.org/10.48130/ebp-0025-0019
DOI: 10.48130/ebp-0025-0019
Latest article publication date: 15 January 2026
Subject of research: Not applicable
COI statement: The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Fichiers joints
  • Figure 2. Physicochemical properties of biochars prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures and their effects on soil properties and enzyme activities. (a) DOC content of biochar pyrolyzed at 300, 500, and 700 °C. (b) BET of biochar at different pyrolysis temperatures. (c) FTIR spectra of biochar prepared at different temperatures. (d) Soil pH and EC under different treatments. (e) Soil sucrase (SC) activity under different treatments. (f) DHA activity under different treatments. (g) Soil DOC content. (h) SOC content under different treatments. (i) SOM content under different treatments.
25/03/2026 TranSpread
Regions: North America, United States, Asia, China
Keywords: Science, Agriculture & fishing, Applied science, Engineering

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