Influence of pH on Cadmium and Zinc Concentrations of Cucumber Grown in Sewage Sludge

Abstract
Parthenocarpic cucumber (Cucumis sativus L. ‘La Reine’) plants were grown in the greenhouse in containers filled with equal parts by volume of peatmoss and vermiculite blended with 0%, 25%, or 50% by volume compost made from ferric-chloride-precipitated, lime-stabilized, digested sewage sludge composted with wood-chips and amended with various rates of sulfur. The Cd concentration of leaf and fruit samples from plants grown in media amended with 25% or 50% compost and S at 0, 10, 20, or 40 g·liter–1 was unaffected by changes in pH from 7.2 to 3.4. However, Zn concentration in fruit samples from plants grown in media amended with 25% compost and S at 40 g·liter–1 increased relative to other rates of S, whereas Zn concentration of leaf tissue was unaffected by rate of S application. Yield of fruit was not significantly affected by any of the treatments. Cucumber plants can be grown successfully in media amended with as much as 50% composted sewage sludge low in heavy metal content and over a wide range of pH values without the accumulation of fruit Cd levels hazardous to human health.

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