Title of article
Application of Biochemical Tests to Evaluate the Pollution of the Unislaw Basin soils with Heavy Metals
Author/Authors
Bartkowiak، a نويسنده Department of Soil Science and Soil Protection, Faculty of Agriculture and Biotechnology, University of Technology and Life Sciences, Bernardy?ska 6 St., 85-029 Bydgoszcz, Poland , , Lemanowicz، j نويسنده Sub-Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Agriculture and Biotechnology, University of Technology and Life Sciences, Bernardy?ska 6 St., 85-029 Bydgoszcz, Poland ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
8
From page
93
To page
100
Abstract
To determine the extent and the size of the environment pollution with heavy metals, biological
methods, investigating the enzymatic activity of soil can be applied. Most frequently, the enzymes investigated
in the soils threatened with anthropogenic contamination are phosphatases, dehydrogenases as reacting fastest
to the increase in the content of heavy metals in the environment. The aim of the paper was to apply the
results of the research to the activity of selected oxydo-reducing and hydrolytic enzymes to define the
pollution of soils with zinc, copper and nickel of the Unis?aw Basin, the Kujawy and Pomorze Province. The
total contents of Cu, Zn and Ni in the soils of the region allow for classifying the soils as unpolluted with those
metals, while the contents of the forms extracted with the DTPA solution point to a low mobility of the
elements and to their availability to plants. In terms of the negative effect of those heavy metals on the activity
of selected enzymes, they have been ordered as follows: dehydrogenases: Ni > Zn, alkaline phosphatase:
Zn > Cu, acid phosphatase: Zn > Cu. The use of enzymatic tests to evaluate the ecochemical condition of soils
even with a natural content of heavy metals facilitates the long-term monitoring and identifying the trends.
Journal title
International Journal of Environmental Research(IJER)
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
International Journal of Environmental Research(IJER)
Record number
1847512
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