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Metal accumulation in wild plants surrounding mining wastes.
Environ Pollut. 2006 Nov; 144(1):84-92.EP

Abstract

Four sites were selected for collection of plants growing on polluted soil developed on tailings from Ag, Au, and Zn mines at the Zacatecas state in Mexico. Trace element concentrations varied between sites, the most polluted area was at El Bote mine near to Zacatecas city. The ranges of total concentration in soil were as follows: Cd 11-47, Ni 19-26, Pb 232-695, Mn 1132-2400, Cu 134-186 and Zn 116-827 mg kg(-1) air-dried soil weight. All soil samples had concentrations above typical values for non-polluted soils from the same soil types (Cd 0.6+/-0.3, Ni 52+/-4, Pb 41+/-3mg kg(-1)). However, for the majority of samples the DTPA-extractable element concentrations were less than 10% of the total. Some of the wild plants are potentially metal tolerant, because they were able to grow in highly polluted substrates. Plant metal analysis revealed that most species did not translocate metals to their aerial parts, therefore they behave as excluder plants. Polygonum aviculare accumulated Zn (9236 mg kg(-1)) at concentrations near to the criteria for hyperaccumulator plants. Jatropha dioica also accumulated high Zn (6249 mg kg(-1)) concentrations.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Soil Chemistry, IRENAT, Colegio de Postgraduados, Carr, México-Texcoco km 36.5, Montecillo, Mexico 56230, Mexico. crogelio@colpos.mx <crogelio@colpos.mx>No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16631286

Citation

González, R Carrillo, and M C A. González-Chávez. "Metal Accumulation in Wild Plants Surrounding Mining Wastes." Environmental Pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987), vol. 144, no. 1, 2006, pp. 84-92.
González RC, González-Chávez MC. Metal accumulation in wild plants surrounding mining wastes. Environ Pollut. 2006;144(1):84-92.
González, R. C., & González-Chávez, M. C. (2006). Metal accumulation in wild plants surrounding mining wastes. Environmental Pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987), 144(1), 84-92.
González RC, González-Chávez MC. Metal Accumulation in Wild Plants Surrounding Mining Wastes. Environ Pollut. 2006;144(1):84-92. PubMed PMID: 16631286.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Metal accumulation in wild plants surrounding mining wastes. AU - González,R Carrillo, AU - González-Chávez,M C A, Y1 - 2006/04/24/ PY - 2005/06/01/received PY - 2005/12/08/accepted PY - 2006/4/25/pubmed PY - 2007/8/3/medline PY - 2006/4/25/entrez SP - 84 EP - 92 JF - Environmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987) JO - Environ Pollut VL - 144 IS - 1 N2 - Four sites were selected for collection of plants growing on polluted soil developed on tailings from Ag, Au, and Zn mines at the Zacatecas state in Mexico. Trace element concentrations varied between sites, the most polluted area was at El Bote mine near to Zacatecas city. The ranges of total concentration in soil were as follows: Cd 11-47, Ni 19-26, Pb 232-695, Mn 1132-2400, Cu 134-186 and Zn 116-827 mg kg(-1) air-dried soil weight. All soil samples had concentrations above typical values for non-polluted soils from the same soil types (Cd 0.6+/-0.3, Ni 52+/-4, Pb 41+/-3mg kg(-1)). However, for the majority of samples the DTPA-extractable element concentrations were less than 10% of the total. Some of the wild plants are potentially metal tolerant, because they were able to grow in highly polluted substrates. Plant metal analysis revealed that most species did not translocate metals to their aerial parts, therefore they behave as excluder plants. Polygonum aviculare accumulated Zn (9236 mg kg(-1)) at concentrations near to the criteria for hyperaccumulator plants. Jatropha dioica also accumulated high Zn (6249 mg kg(-1)) concentrations. SN - 0269-7491 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/16631286/Metal_accumulation_in_wild_plants_surrounding_mining_wastes_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -