1. Introduction
The large-scale land destruction caused by mining is a serious and increasingly valued problem in China and the world [
1,
2]. Open pit mining directly destroys the surface soil layer and vegetation, and underground mining leads to surface collapse, resulting in the destruction of land and vegetation. Wastes in the process of mine development (such as tailings, waste rocks, etc.) need a large area of stacking site, resulting in a large occupation of land and the destruction of the original ecosystem of the stacking site, causing changes in natural conditions and forming environmental factors that restrict plant growth and development [
3,
4]. At the same time, the toxic and harmful substances discharged from beneficiation can also easily cause major ecological and environmental problems, such as environmental pollution, local soil and water loss and habitat deterioration caused by vegetation loss. The settlement of vegetation and ecological restoration on the tailing yard not only prevents environmental pollution and water and soil loss, but it also beautifies the environment, and it will not cause secondary pollution. At the same time, it obtains biomass. This is an ideal method for the development and reuse of mine wasteland [
5]. Vegetation restoration and ecological reconstruction of industrial and mining tailings are also an important field of current ecological research [
6].
There have been a large number of reports on the effects of rhizosphere environments on the morphological changes of heavy metals in soil. Great progress has been made in the morphological changes of heavy metals in rhizosphere soil solutions and plant availability, the morphological changes of solid heavy metals in rhizosphere soil, and the absorption process of heavy metals by hyperaccumulated plants [
7,
8]. However, as a result of the joint action of plants and heavy metals, the morphological changes of heavy metals in the rhizosphere are affected by the differences in plant species and the response of heavy metals to the rhizosphere environment. The existing studies on the changes of the rhizosphere environment mostly focus on the changes of heavy metal content in rhizosphere soil solution and the changes of plants’ effective state of heavy metals. More studies on the morphological changes of heavy metals in soil solid phase use rhizosphere bags, rhizosphere boxes, and other artificial rhizosphere environments [
9,
10]. This simulated rhizosphere environment is different from the growth environment of natural plants. Therefore, strengthening the research on the plant rhizosphere environment, especially the solid-phase morphological changes of heavy metals in the plant rhizosphere environment under natural conditions, is of great significance to understand the environmental behavior of heavy metals in the soil plant system and to explore the toxicological effects of soil heavy metals on plants and phytoremediation of heavy metal contaminated sites.
Dabaoshan Mine is located at the junction of Qujiang District and Qingyuan County, Shaoguan City, Guangdong Province. It is a large iron polymetallic sulfide-associated deposit. The area is located in a subtropical monsoon climate that is warm, humid and rainy, and the surface rock is strongly weathered [
11]. The discharge of beneficiation tailings and waste rocks has formed multiple tailings ponds. The accumulation of a large number of tailings has a serious impact on the growth of surrounding organisms, residents’ life and economic development [
12,
13,
14]. Qin Jianqiao et al. [
15] conducted a large number of studies on vegetation restoration and biological community reconstruction, soil enzyme activity, and plant growth of the tailings pond, showing that manual participation can guide the succession direction of the plant community in the tailings pond, which is conducive to accelerating the ecological restoration process of the tailings wasteland, but the research on the influence of plants on the form of soil heavy metals has not been reported thus far. Therefore, from January 2018 to May 2019, this paper investigated several tailings ponds of the Dabaoshan iron polymetallic mine in northern Guangdong many times. Taking the rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soil of Miscanthus floridulus as the research object, through the sampling and analyses of rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soil of wild plants in a natural environment, combined with different growth times under different biomass conditions, the absorption of heavy metals and the comparative analyses of rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soils by Miscanthus pentaphyllus plants were carried out to explore the form, content, distribution and influencing factors of Zn, Pb, Cu, Cd, Ni and Cr in the rhizosphere environment of the large iron polymetallic tailings reservoir area, in order to provide a theoretical basis for better vegetation restoration and pollution control of the tailings wasteland.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Overview of the Study Area
Dabaoshan Mine is located in northern Guangdong, 113°40′–113°43′ E, 24°30′–24°36′ N, belonging to the subtropical monsoon climate zone. The surface rocks are weathered strongly, and the basal soil type is red soil, which gradually becomes mountain yellow soil with the increase in altitude. Dabaoshan mine is a large iron polymetallic-associated deposit. The upper part of the main ore body is limonite, the middle part is a copper–sulfur ore body, and the lower part is a lead–zinc ore body, accompanied by tungsten, bismuth, molybdenum, gold and silver and other non-ferrous metals. Since mining in the 1970s, tailings and waste rock from mineral processing have successively formed four tailings ponds of different sizes [
15,
16,
17].
The center of the Tielong tailings pond (sample plot 1) is located at 24°31′26.5″ N and 113°43′08.6″ E, with an altitude of 350 m and an area of about 2.0 km
2. Since the 1970s, ore dust and ore washing wastewater have been discharged. In the tailings pond area, there are almost no plants living within 1000 m from the inside of the dam, and the remaining plants are of single species. The center of the Caoduikeng tailings pond (sample plot 2) is located at 24°34′16.5″ N and 113°43′34.3″ E, with an altitude of 580 m and an area of about 1.5 km
2. At the southern end of the reservoir, there is a large marsh zone formed by ore washing water and mountain streams flowing through this area, and perennial water accumulation occurs. The northern end is mostly composed of deposits of mineral soil, which is wet and sparsely vegetated. The center of the Donghua tailings pond (sample plot 3) is located at 24°33′56.1″ N and 113°40′55.6″ E, with an altitude of 230 m. The reservoir area is about 0.8 km
2. There was basically no tailings discharged five years ago. From the overall topography, the ground humidity gradually increases from the height to the bottom, and vegetation richness also increases. The center of the small tailings pond (sample plot 4) is located at 24°33′17.7″ N and 113°43′35.7″ E, with an altitude of 630 m and an area of 0.3 km
2. The tailings are piled up similarly to mountains and were abandoned 10 years ago. Vegetation has mainly been restored naturally, with abundant plant species. Geographic location of the four tailings ponds is shown in
Figure 1.
2.2. Sample Collection and Processing
Four tailings reservoir areas with different use conditions were taken as the investigation objects. Each reservoir area was used as a study sample, and 16 sample areas were set according to vegetation distribution. In each quadrat, the investigation recorded all plant species, quantity, plant height, abundance, coverage and aboveground biomass, etc.
The test soil samples were collected from four tailings reservoir areas with good growth of M. floridulus populations. Rhizosphere soil samples were selected, and plants of similar size (dry weight of plants was about 50 g) were dug out intact. Soil with a thickness of about 1 mm and attached to the surface of small roots was collected. Six samples were collected from each sample area, and a total of 24 rhizosphere soil samples were collected. Non-rhizosphere soil samples were collected from 8~10 cm around the roots of the plants. Six samples were collected from each sample area, and a total of 24 non-rhizosphere soil samples were collected. The depth of soil sample was 0~40 cm according to the extended depth of the awn roots in the sampling area.
In order to study the effect of plant absorption on the exchange state of heavy metals in rhizosphere soil, a small tailings pond (sample plot 4) with the most uniform growth of M. floridulus was selected, and plants of different sizes were collected in June when M. floridulus grows vigorously. They were divided into 4 groups: <25 cm, 25~50 cm, 50~100 cm and >100 cm (the biomass of each group was calculated according to the average within the group). Ten plants were collected in each group, and the corresponding rhizosphere soil of each plant was also collected. The rhizosphere soil was also divided into 4 groups with 10 rhizosphere soil samples in each group, and they were brought back to the laboratory for analysis.
In order to study the effect of the growth time of M. floridulus on the distribution of heavy metals in rhizosphere soil, the growth of M. floridulus was regularly observed in the small tailings pond (sample plot 4) from January 2018. When the M. floridulus grew 5~10 cm above the ground, 10 samples were collected from the M. floridulus plant and its rhizosphere soil, and samples were taken on 30, 60, 90 and 120 days.
2.3. Analytical Method
Heavy metal content in soil and plants: The roots, stems and leaves of
M. floridulus samples were separated and washed with deionized water, dried at 70 °C until constant weight, and crushed through 80-mesh sieve. The samples were determined by dry ashing with 1:1 HCl constant volume and atomic absorption spectrophotometer. The contents of Zn, Pb, Cu, Cd, Ni and Cr were digested by HCl, HF and perchloric acid, and determined by ICP-OES (Optima5300DV, Perkin-Elmer, Sheldon, CT, USA). The effective state content of the corresponding heavy metal elements in the soil was extracted by 0.1 mol·L
−1 HCl (liquid:soil = 5:1), and the liquid to be measured was determined by ICP-OES [
18]. Soil reference materials (gbw07388) and parallel samples were inserted during digestion and analysis of soil samples for quality control of accuracy. The recovery rate of reference material analysis was 75–110%, indicating that the analysis method was reliable.
Soil agricultural chemical analysis was used for determination of basic soil chemical properties [
19]: soil and water were mixed at 2.5:1, and soil pH was measured with a pH meter. Organic matter was determined by potassium dichromate volumetric method. Alkali-hydrolysis N was determined by alkali-hydrolysis diffusion method. After extracting the soil samples with 0.5 mol·L
−1 sodium bicarbonate, the available P was determined by molybdenum blue colorimetry.
The chemical extraction method proposed by Tessier et al. [
20] in 1979 was used to analyze the morphology of heavy metals. Separating metals into exchangeable, carbonate, Fe–Mn oxides, organically bound, and residual state specifically refers to the method of Gomez-Airza et al. [
21].
2.4. Data Processing
Statistical analysis of data was performed using a combination of Microsoft Excel 2003 and SPSS 16.0 software, and the significance of differences between means were analyzed using Duncan’s multiple comparisons (SSR test, p < 0.05).
4. Discussion
As a special kind of heavy metal-polluted land, the key to solving the problem of phytoremediation of heavy metal tailings wasteland lies in the improvement of the matrix and the selection of species [
45]. A considerable part of heavy metal tailings wasteland is located in relatively low-lying areas such as valleys and river valleys [
46], which are not urgently required to be transformed into cultivated land. At present, what needs to be solved urgently is to improve its exposed and unstable tailings matrix and to realize vegetation coverage, so as to reduce the harm of the wasteland to the surrounding environment. Therefore, matrix improvement is particularly important here. Through the study of the rhizosphere environment of wild plants under natural conditions, this study shows that the growth of plants can improve the soil matrix (
Table 1), which is mainly reflected in the increase in soil nutrients (
Table 1) and the decrease in total heavy metals (
Table 2). On the premise that the known species of heavy metal hyperaccumulation plants are too few and the number is too limited to be widely used, increasing the research on local tolerant plants and actively improving the tailings matrix are of great value for accelerating the vegetation coverage process of heavy metal tailings wasteland.
Zhou Qixing et al. [
47] studied the changes of different forms of heavy metals in crop rhizosphere soil in a simulated environment. The results showed that the forms of heavy metals in rhizosphere soil changed regularly in different periods of crop growth, which showed that the contents of exchangeable, carbonate-bound and iron manganese oxide-bound increased first and then decreased. After a certain time, the contents of exchangeable and carbonate-bound were finally lower than those in non-rhizosphere soil. The change in organic-bound metals in rhizosphere soil is opposite to that of iron and manganese oxides, which gradually decrease to the lowest during the growth period and then gradually recover. This study shows that under natural conditions, the proportion of organic-bound heavy metals in the total amount of heavy metals increases significantly regardless of the growth time of
M. floridulus, and tends to maintain at a certain level. Although the change range of exchange heavy metals is slightly smaller than that of organic-bound heavy metals, it is also higher than that of non-rhizosphere soil, and there is an obvious continuous increase. On the contrary, compared with non-rhizosphere soil, the proportion of carbonate-bound state and Fe–Mn oxide-bound state in the total amount of heavy metals in the rhizosphere soil of
M. floridulus decreased significantly and tended to maintain at a certain level after a period of growth. The reason for the above different phenomena may be that compared with simulated cultivation, the growth environment of natural plants is equivalent to an open and unlimited pollution source [
48,
49].
For the absorption of a single plant, the total amount of pollutants in the soil environment is almost unlimited, and a single plant has little impact on the surrounding soil environment as a whole. Factors such as rain leaching, the activities of animals and microorganisms, and the growth and reproduction of a large number of other plants promote the morphological transformation process of heavy metals in soil and their migration in physical space, such that the effective forms of heavy metals that can be directly absorbed by
M. floridulus near the rhizosphere can be continuously supplemented, without the phenomenon that the absorbable forms are greatly reduced due to excessive plant absorption under cultivation conditions [
50,
51]. At the same time, the content of soil organic matter in the tailings reservoir area is low, and the growth of
M. floridulus causes a significant increase in the content of organic matter in the rhizosphere environment (
Table 1), which promotes a large increase in the content of organically bound heavy metals (
Table 3,
Table 4,
Table 5 and
Table 6). The root exudates of
M. floridulus reduce the soil pH, resulting in the transformation of the carbonate-bound state and even organic-bound state to an exchange state in the soil. In addition, the exchangeable state of heavy metals is a bioavailable form. Compared with the residual state, the carbonate-bound, iron manganese oxide-bound and organic-bound heavy metals are weak binding forms and have strong potential bioavailability. The change in the content percentage of these four forms of heavy metals in their total amount will also lead to a change in heavy metal migration and other activities in the soil [
51,
52].
Therefore, it can be considered that the absorption of M. floridulus may not be the only reason why the total amount of heavy metals in rhizosphere soil is lower than that in non-rhizosphere soil. The growth of M. floridulus and the action of root exudates cause the change in the form composition of heavy metals in rhizospheres, especially the transformation from a residue state to a weak binding state, and a carbonate-binding state to an Fe–Mn oxide binding state, and the weak binding form components of these heavy metals tend to decompose and transform into an effective state. As a result, the proportion of the available content of heavy metals in the rhizosphere soil of M. floridulus increased significantly, which greatly improved the migration ability of soil heavy metals and made it easier to be taken away by external factors such as rainwater leaching, resulting in the decrease in the total content of heavy metals in the soil.
5. Conclusions
(1) The content of organic matter in the natural soil of the Dabaoshan tailings reservoir area in northern Guangdong is low, while the soil pH value decreases and the content of soil organic matter increases significantly in the rhizosphere environment compared with the non-rhizosphere environment.
(2) The total amount of heavy metals in the rhizosphere environment and non-rhizosphere environment decreased significantly or extremely significantly due to factors such as absorption of M. floridulus.
(3) The main forms of heavy metals in rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soils of M. floridulus in the tailings reservoir area show that the mineral content accounts for most of the total amount of heavy metals, and the exchange content is low.
(4) With the growth of M. floridulus, the contents of heavy metal exchange state and organic-bound state in rhizosphere soil increased significantly, while the contents of carbonate-bound state and iron manganese oxide-bound state decreased.
(5) The exchangeable contents of Zn, Pb, Cu, Cd, Ni and Cr were negatively correlated with soil pH, while the contents of carbonate-bound and iron manganese oxide-bound were positively correlated with pH. Organic-bound heavy metals were positively correlated with organic matter content, while carbonate-bound and iron manganese oxide-bound were negatively correlated with organic matter content. However, there is no significant correlation between the existence, distribution and total amount of heavy metals.