• Title of article

    Arsenic in tree rings at a highly contaminated site

  • Author/Authors

    Zhongqi Cheng، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Brendan M. Buckley، نويسنده , , Beth Katz a، نويسنده , , William Wright، نويسنده , , Richard Bailey b، نويسنده , , Kenneth Wilson and Kevin T. Smith، نويسنده , , Jingbo Li a، نويسنده , , Ashley Curtis a، نويسنده , , Alexander van Geen، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    324
  • To page
    334
  • Abstract
    Arsenic concentrations were measured in annual rings, pith, bark, and leaves of five tree species (four genera) from a site highly contaminated with As inVineland,NewJersey, and two nearby uncontaminated areas. The highestAs concentrationswere found in bark (0.68±0.89 mg/kg, n=16) and leaves (1.9±1.8 mg/kg, n=4) from the contaminated area. Tree-ring As levels from the contaminated area (0.28±0.15 mg/kg, n=32) were low but still considerably higher than those from the control areas (0.06±0.06 mg/kg, n=30). There is a generally positive relationship between soil and tree-ring As levels. The overall low uptake of As by trees contrasts with that of P, a chemical analog for As(V) in aerated soils.Much higher P concentration in sapwood than in heartwood indicates that P is exported into more recently formed wood during the conversion from sapwood to heartwood; this again is drastically different than the behavior of As which is present in sapwood and heartwood at comparable levels. Variable sapwood As concentrations observed in detailed radial profiles of tree-ring chemistry of a pine and an oak from the contaminated site suggest that As is most likely transported among multiple rings within the sapwood. Therefore, tree species for which sapwood is thin (e.g., oak as in this study) should be preferred for reconstructing the history of contamination of a site. Due to the possibility of lateral translocation between growth rings, further studies are necessary to understand within-tree As transport and storage before dendrochemistry can be confidently accepted for such applications.
  • Keywords
    Arsenic , Tree ring , Radial profile , Dendrochemistry
  • Journal title
    Science of the Total Environment
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Science of the Total Environment
  • Record number

    986174