Title of article
Arsenic in soils and plants of woodland regenerated on an arsenic-contaminated substrate: A sustainable natural remediation?
Author/Authors
Paula Madej?n، نويسنده , , Nicholas W. Lepp، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
7
From page
256
To page
262
Abstract
Plant As accumulation at three As-polluted sites where spontaneous re-vegetation has taken place is examined. Each site had a
different source of soil As (coal fly ash, LeBlanc process waste, canal dredging). Plant analysis indicates that soil–plant As transfer
is poor at each site. Any mobile As is retained in root tissues, with little transfer to shoots. Bryophytes, pteridophytes, herbaceous
and woody plants sampled at each site predominantly showed As concentrations of b3 mg kg−1 dry wt, whilst total soil As ranged
between 50 and 220 mg kg−1 dry wt. Risk associated with food chain transfer at these sites is low when compared to other routes
such as direct ingestion/inhalation of As-contaminated particulates re-entrained from an unvegetated or unstable substrate.
Keywords
bioavailability , Soil–plant transfer , risk , Arsenic availability
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
980901
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