Title of article :
Distribution of Pb, Cd and Ba in soils and plants of two contaminated sites
Author/Authors :
J.، Pichtel, نويسنده , , K.، Kuroiwa, نويسنده , , H.T.، Sawyerr, نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages :
-170
From page :
171
To page :
0
Abstract :
Evaluation of metal accumulation in soils and plants is of environmental importance due to their health effects on humans and other biota. Soil material and plant tissue were collected along transects in two heavily contaminated facilities, a Superfund site and a lead-acid battery dump, and analyzed for metal content. Soil lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd) and barium (Ba) concentrations for the Superfund site averaged 55,480, 8.5 and 132.3 mg/kg, respectively. Soil Pb occurred primarily in the carbonate, sulfide/residual and organic chemical fractions (41.6, 28.6 and 16.7%, respectively). Soil Pb, Cd and Ba concentrations for the dump site averaged 29,400, 3.9 and 1130 mg/kg, respectively. Soil Pb occurred mostly in the organic and carbonate fractions as 48.5 and 42.5%, respectively. Pb uptake in the two sites ranged from non-detectable (Agrostemma githago, Plantago rugelii, Alliaria officinalis shoots), to 1800 mg/kg (Agrostemma githago root). Cd uptake was maximal in Taraxacum officinale at 15.4 mg/kg (Superfund site). In the majority (?65%) of the plants studied, root Pb and Cd content was higher than that for the shoots. Tissue Pb correlated slightly with exchangeable and soluble soil Pb; however, tissue Cd was poorly correlated with soil Cd species. None of the sampled plants accumulated measurable amounts of Ba. Those plants that removed most Pb and Cd were predominantly herbaceous species, some of which produce sufficient biomass to be practical for phytoremediation technologies. Growth chamber studies demonstrated the ability of T. officinale and Ambrosia artemisiifolia to successfully remove soil Pb and Cd during repeated croppings. Tissue Pb was correlated with exchangeable soil Pb at r2=0.68 in Ambrosia artemisiifolia.
Keywords :
accumulation , barium , Cadmium , food chain , lead , plant uptake , Superfund
Journal title :
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Serial Year :
2000
Journal title :
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Record number :
38829
Link To Document :
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