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Assessment of the phytoextraction potential of high biomass crop plants.
Environ Pollut. 2008 Mar; 152(1):32-40.EP

Abstract

A hydroponic screening method was used to identify high biomass crop plants with the ability to accumulate metals. Highest values of shoot accumulation were found in maize cv. Ranchero, rapeseed cv. Karat, and cardoon cv. Peralta for Pb (18 753 mg kg(-1)), Zn (10 916 mg kg(-1)), and Cd (242 mg kg(-1)), respectively. Subsequently, we tested the potential of these three cultivars for the phytoextraction of a metal spiked compost, finding out that, in cardoon and maize plants, increasing Zn and Cd concentrations led to lower values of root and shoot DW. By contrast, rapeseed shoot growth was not significantly affected by Cd concentration. Finally, a metal polluted soil was used to check these cultivars' phytoextraction capacity. Although the soil was phytotoxic enough to prevent the growth of cardoon and rapeseed plants, maize plants phytoextracted 3.7 mg Zn pot(-1). We concluded that the phytoextraction performance of cultivars varies depending on the screening method used.

Authors+Show Affiliations

NEIKER-tecnalia, Basque Institute of Agricultural Research and Development, c/Berreaga 1, E-48160 Derio, Spain.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

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

Language

eng

PubMed ID

17644228

Citation

Hernández-Allica, Javier, et al. "Assessment of the Phytoextraction Potential of High Biomass Crop Plants." Environmental Pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987), vol. 152, no. 1, 2008, pp. 32-40.
Hernández-Allica J, Becerril JM, Garbisu C. Assessment of the phytoextraction potential of high biomass crop plants. Environ Pollut. 2008;152(1):32-40.
Hernández-Allica, J., Becerril, J. M., & Garbisu, C. (2008). Assessment of the phytoextraction potential of high biomass crop plants. Environmental Pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987), 152(1), 32-40.
Hernández-Allica J, Becerril JM, Garbisu C. Assessment of the Phytoextraction Potential of High Biomass Crop Plants. Environ Pollut. 2008;152(1):32-40. PubMed PMID: 17644228.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Assessment of the phytoextraction potential of high biomass crop plants. AU - Hernández-Allica,Javier, AU - Becerril,José M, AU - Garbisu,Carlos, Y1 - 2007/07/17/ PY - 2006/11/03/received PY - 2007/05/29/revised PY - 2007/06/03/accepted PY - 2007/7/24/pubmed PY - 2008/6/18/medline PY - 2007/7/24/entrez SP - 32 EP - 40 JF - Environmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987) JO - Environ Pollut VL - 152 IS - 1 N2 - A hydroponic screening method was used to identify high biomass crop plants with the ability to accumulate metals. Highest values of shoot accumulation were found in maize cv. Ranchero, rapeseed cv. Karat, and cardoon cv. Peralta for Pb (18 753 mg kg(-1)), Zn (10 916 mg kg(-1)), and Cd (242 mg kg(-1)), respectively. Subsequently, we tested the potential of these three cultivars for the phytoextraction of a metal spiked compost, finding out that, in cardoon and maize plants, increasing Zn and Cd concentrations led to lower values of root and shoot DW. By contrast, rapeseed shoot growth was not significantly affected by Cd concentration. Finally, a metal polluted soil was used to check these cultivars' phytoextraction capacity. Although the soil was phytotoxic enough to prevent the growth of cardoon and rapeseed plants, maize plants phytoextracted 3.7 mg Zn pot(-1). We concluded that the phytoextraction performance of cultivars varies depending on the screening method used. SN - 0269-7491 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/17644228/Assessment_of_the_phytoextraction_potential_of_high_biomass_crop_plants_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0269-7491(07)00272-2 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -