Agronomy, Vol. 15, Pages 2391: Agronomic Assessment of Olive Mill Wastewater Sludge Derived Composts on Lactuca sativa and Zea mays: Fertilizing Efficiency and Potential Toxic Effect on Seed Germination and Seedling Growth


Agronomy, Vol. 15, Pages 2391: Agronomic Assessment of Olive Mill Wastewater Sludge Derived Composts on Lactuca sativa and Zea mays: Fertilizing Efficiency and Potential Toxic Effect on Seed Germination and Seedling Growth

Agronomy doi: 10.3390/agronomy15102391

Authors:
Miguel Ángel Mira-Urios
José A. Sáez-Tovar
F. Javier Andreu-Rodríguez
Silvia Sánchez-Méndez
Luciano Orden
Lucía Valverde-Vozmediano
María Dolores Pérez-Murcia
Raúl Moral

Olive mill wastewater is a polluting residue generated from the olive oil industry and is one which constitutes an environmental concern in Mediterranean countries. Composting has been reported as a viable valorization alternative, as it reduces the volume and the phytotoxic characteristics of OMW. In this study, several composts derived from OMW were evaluated under controlled conditions over two growing season pot experiments using Lactuca sativa as a test crop. The analysis focused on soil quality changes, crop yield, and plant development. Additionally, potential phytotoxicity was also evaluated through a direct acute toxicity plant growth test. Application of OMW composts improved soil fertility indicators, including oxidizable carbon, Kjeldahl total nitrogen, Olsen phosphorous, and plant availability. Crop yields were comparable to those obtained with other organic amendments such as vermicompost and fresh cattle manure in both growing seasons and plant development (in terms of chlorophyll content and canopy cover) was not negatively affected. Nutrient uptake (NPK) was consistent during both growing seasons, with similar nitrogen use efficiency to that achieved in other organic treatments. Regarding the potential toxic effect, the OMW composts tested enhanced seed germination when mixed with coconut fiber at weight ratios below 29.2%. No half-maximal effective concentration (EC50) values were detected, even at 100% compost concentration, while half-maximal inhibitory concentration (LC50) values ranged between 65–75%. These results indicate that OMW composts can serve as an effective short-term source of plant-available nitrogen and a medium-term source of phosphorus, without risk of finding inhibitory or phytotoxic effects on crops.



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