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Featured researches published by Aurélia Michaud.


Science of The Total Environment | 2014

Impact of long-term organic residue recycling in agriculture on soil solution composition and trace metal leaching in soils.

Philippe Cambier; Valérie Pot; Vincent Mercier; Aurélia Michaud; Pierre Benoit; Agathe Revallier; Sabine Houot

Recycling composted organic residues in agriculture can reduce the need of mineral fertilizers and improve the physicochemical and biological properties of cultivated soils. However, some trace elements may accumulate in soils following repeated applications and impact other compartments of the agrosystems. This study aims at evaluating the long-term impact of such practices on the composition of soil leaching water, especially on trace metal concentrations. The field experiment QualiAgro started in 1998 on typical loess Luvisol of the Paris Basin, with a maize-wheat crop succession and five modalities: spreading of three different urban waste composts, farmyard manure (FYM), and no organic amendment (CTR). Inputs of trace metals have been close to regulatory limits, but supplies of organic matter and nitrogen overpassed common practices. Soil solutions were collected from wick lysimeters at 45 and 100 cm in one plot for each modality, during two drainage periods after the last spreading. Despite wide temporal variations, a significant effect of treatments on major solutes appears at 45 cm: DOC, Ca, K, Mg, Na, nitrate, sulphate and chloride concentrations were higher in most amended plots compared to CTR. Cu concentrations were also significantly higher in leachates of amended plots compared to CTR, whereas no clear effect emerged for Zn. The influence of amendments on solute concentrations appeared weaker at 1 m than at 45 cm, but still significant and positive for major anions and DOC. Average concentrations of Cu and Zn at 1m depth lied in the ranges [2.5; 3.8] and [2.5; 10.5 μg/L], respectively, with values slightly higher for plots amended with sewage sludge compost or FYM than for CTR. However, leaching of both metals was less than 1% of their respective inputs through organic amendments. For Cd, most values were <0.05 μg/L. So, metals added through spreading of compost or manure during 14 years may have increased metal concentrations in leachates of amended plots, in spite of increased soil organic matter, factor of metal retention. Indeed, DOC, also increased by amendments, favours the mobility of Cu; whereas pH variations, depending on treatments, influence negatively the solubility of Zn. Generic adsorption functions of these variables partly explain the variations of trace metal concentrations and helped to unravel the numerous processes induced by regular amendments with organic waste products.


Science of The Total Environment | 2019

Trace metal availability in soil horizons amended with various urban waste composts during 17 years – Monitoring and modelling

Philippe Cambier; Aurélia Michaud; Remigio Paradelo; Myriam Germain; Vincent Mercier; Annie Guérin-Lebourg; Agathe Revallier; Sabine Houot

Recycling organic residues in agrosystems presents several benefits but faces the question of contaminants, among them a few trace metals which eventually accumulate in soils following regular applications of organic waste products (OWP) and represent an ecological risk. The increase of total trace metal contents in amended topsoils can be predicted by a mass balance approach, but the evolution of their available fractions is a more intricate issue. We aimed at modelling this evolution by using the dataset of a long-term field experiment of OWP applications (manure and three urban waste composts). Two operationally-defined fractions of 6 trace metals have been quantified in the OWP and amended topsoils between 2002 and 2015: the soluble and potentially available metals, extracted in 0.01 M CaCl2 and 0.05 M EDTA solutions, respectively. The potentially available metals have progressively increased in amended topsoils, at rates depending on elements and types of OWP. For Zn, these increases corresponded in average to inputs of potentially available Zn from OWP. But the soil stocks of potentially available Cu increased faster than from the inputs of EDTA-extractable Cu, showing linear regression slopes between 1.4 and 2.5, depending on OWP type. The influence of OWP has been provisionally interpreted in the light of their efficiency to increase soil organic matter and their inputs of reactive oxides. Soluble copper has increased with repeated amendments. But soluble cadmium, nickel and zinc have generally decreased, as they are influenced by changing soil variables such as pH and organic matter. Statistic models were used to unravel the relationships between soluble and EDTA-extractable metals and other soil variables. For Cu, the most satisfactory models just relate soluble and potentially available Cu. Developing such models could contribute to predict the long-term effects of a precise scenario of agricultural OWP recycling upon available trace metals in soils.


Plant and Soil | 2007

Copper uptake and phytotoxicity as assessed in situ for durum wheat (Triticum turgidum durum L.) cultivated in Cu-contaminated, former vineyard soils

Aurélia Michaud; Matthieu Bravin; M. Galleguillos; Philippe Hinsinger


Plant and Soil | 2008

Copper phytotoxicity affects root elongation and iron nutrition in durum wheat (Triticum turgidum durum L.)

Aurélia Michaud; Carole Chappellaz; Philippe Hinsinger


Innovations Agronomiques | 2015

Réseau PRO : Création d'un réseau d'essais au champ et d'un outil de mutualisation des données pour l'étude de la valeur agronomique et des impacts environnementaux des Produits Résiduaires Organiques recyclés en agriculture

M. Heurtaux; Aurélia Michaud; A. Bell; Sabine Houot; S. Alexandre; Annie Duparque; B. Balloy; Anne Schaub; Robert Trochard; Alain Bouthier; M. Buffet; S. Guillouais; F. Flénet; Matthieu Bravin; B. Decoopman; V. Goldberg; O. Demarle; J.Y Cahurel; Antoine Richard; Virginie Parnaudeau; B. Leclerc; R. Duval; Nathalie Damay; S. Sagot; C. Le Roux; Matthieu Valé; Nathalie Valentin; D. Ollivier; A.S Lepeuple; A. Revailler


Proceedings, GENESIS final conference, Integrated Management of Groundwater Resources and Groundwater Dependent Ecosystems | 2014

Impact of long-term organic residue recycling in agriculture on trace metal leaching in soils

Philippe Cambier; Valerie Pot-Genty; Vincent Mercier; Aurélia Michaud; Fatima Chikhaoui; Veronique Etievant; Jean-Noel Rampon; Pierre Benoit; Agathe Revallier; Sabine Houot


5th Phosphorus in Soils and Plants International Symposium | 2014

Relationships between change in total P stock of the plough layer and P balance after 15 years of composts applications

Rodolphe Lauverjon; Alain Mollier; Sabine Houot; Guillaume Bodineau; Jean-Noel Rampon; Aurélia Michaud; Vincent Mercier; Christian Morel


15. International Conferences of RAMIRAN (Network on R ecycling of Agricultural, Municipal and Industrial Residues in Agriculture) | 2013

A statistical approach to assess soil biodiversity and biological activity responses to repeated organic amendment applications in cultivated soils - Relationships with soil functions

Jeanne Bodin; Jeanne-Chantal Thoisy; Laurence Rougé; Jérôme Dantan; Patrice Lepelletier; Aurélia Michaud; Sabine Houot; Guénola Pérès; Antonio Bispo; Salima Taibi


15. International Conference RAMIRAN - Recycling of organic residues for agriculture: from waste management to ecosystem services | 2013

SOERE PRO: Long term field experiment network for research on the recycling of organic matters issued of wastes in agriculture

Aurélia Michaud; Vincent Mercier; Jean-Noel Rampon; Thierry Morvan; Michel Burban; Denis Montenach; Frederic Hammel; Valérie Sappin-Didier; Françoise Watteau; Frédéric Feder; Jean-Marie Paillat; Dominique Masse; Edmond Hien; Hélène Bacheley; Sabine Houot


15. Conférence Internationale RAMIRAN. Recycling of organic residues for agriculture: from waste management to ecosystem services. RAMIRAN 2013. | 2013

Changes of the plant-available soil phosphorus in the Qualiagro experiment for 9 years of cropping and repeated applications of different urban composts

Rodolphe Lauverjon; Alain Mollier; Sabine Houot; Guillaume Bodineau; Jean-Noel Rampon; Aurélia Michaud; Vincent Mercier; Christian Morel

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Sabine Houot

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Philippe Cambier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Vincent Mercier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Pierre Benoit

Université Paris-Saclay

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Alain Mollier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Denis Montenach

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Thierry Morvan

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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