Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4424577 Environmental Pollution 2013 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

The use of accumulation bioindicator to assess metal bioavailability has mainly concerned individual species. This work addresses this issue at the plant community level. Metal content within different species from plant communities found at three contaminated and one uncontaminated site was compared. Results showed that for two contaminated sites, leaf metals concentrations were comparable to those in plants from control site, i.e. approx (mg/kg) 0.1 Cd, 0.2 Cr, 9.2 Cu, 1.8 Ni, 0.5 Pb and 42 Zn. Only plants from the third site showed higher metal contents, ranging from 1.5- to 8-fold those of the control community. This contrasted with ammonium acetate–EDTA extractions, which indicated a very high “availability” of metals at the three sites, as compared to the control site. Thus, metal content in plant communities provided accurate information on actual transfer toward the ensemble of vegetation, which could be used to establish site-specific “fingerprints” of metal bioavailability.

► Metal contents in plant communities from three contaminated sites were analyzed. ► Metals in plants were not related to total or extractable contents in soil. ► Plants from two out of the three contaminated sites had normal metal contents. ► Metal contents in plant communities provided a fingerprint of metal bioavailability.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Environmental Chemistry
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