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Strategies to use phytoextraction in very acidic soil contaminated by heavy metals.
Chemosphere. 2009 May; 75(6):808-14.C

Abstract

In microcosm experiments, the use of inorganic and organic amendments has been studied as potential agents to reduce heavy metal bioavailability in an acidic soil highly contaminated by Cu, Zn and Ni, that has to be remediated by phytoremediation. The concentrations of heavy metals in the original soil (O-Soil) produced phytotoxic effects with a strong reduction in biomass yield that hinder the utilization of this technology. To overcome phytotoxicity the use of three immobilizing agents was evaluated. The results obtained showed that all the strategies decreased the mobile fractions of heavy metals in soil and increased the metal removal efficiency. In the case of Brassica juncea the best results for Zn and Ni were obtained after zeolites addition (Z-Soil) with an increase of about 6 times with respect to the value found in the O-Soil. In the case of Cu, the more efficient treatment was Ca(OH)(2) addition (Ca-Soil). The B. juncea plants accumulated Cu amounts 8 times greater than in the O-Soil. For this metal, relevant results were obtained also with compost, that increased the amount of Cu in the plants of 7 times with respect to the O-Soil. Similar results were obtained with Helianthus annuus the highest Zn and Ni accumulation was detected in the Z-Soil and compost-treated soils (C-Soil), with an increase of nearly 11 times with respect to the accumulation in the O-Soil. In the case of Cu the highest increase of total uptake was found in the C-Soil: 28 times higher than in the O-Soil. Total accumulation in Poa annua plants showed the highest removal efficiency in the Z-Soil for all metals. The values obtained increased of 4, 11 and 12 times for Cu, Zn and Ni, respectively.

Authors+Show Affiliations

National Research Council, Institute of Ecosystem Study, Pisa, Via Moruzzi 1, 56124 Pisa, Italy. francesca.pedron@ise.cnr.itNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19217142

Citation

Pedron, F, et al. "Strategies to Use Phytoextraction in Very Acidic Soil Contaminated By Heavy Metals." Chemosphere, vol. 75, no. 6, 2009, pp. 808-14.
Pedron F, Petruzzelli G, Barbafieri M, et al. Strategies to use phytoextraction in very acidic soil contaminated by heavy metals. Chemosphere. 2009;75(6):808-14.
Pedron, F., Petruzzelli, G., Barbafieri, M., & Tassi, E. (2009). Strategies to use phytoextraction in very acidic soil contaminated by heavy metals. Chemosphere, 75(6), 808-14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2009.01.044
Pedron F, et al. Strategies to Use Phytoextraction in Very Acidic Soil Contaminated By Heavy Metals. Chemosphere. 2009;75(6):808-14. PubMed PMID: 19217142.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Strategies to use phytoextraction in very acidic soil contaminated by heavy metals. AU - Pedron,F, AU - Petruzzelli,G, AU - Barbafieri,M, AU - Tassi,E, Y1 - 2009/02/12/ PY - 2008/09/02/received PY - 2009/01/14/revised PY - 2009/01/14/accepted PY - 2009/2/17/entrez PY - 2009/2/17/pubmed PY - 2009/6/6/medline SP - 808 EP - 14 JF - Chemosphere JO - Chemosphere VL - 75 IS - 6 N2 - In microcosm experiments, the use of inorganic and organic amendments has been studied as potential agents to reduce heavy metal bioavailability in an acidic soil highly contaminated by Cu, Zn and Ni, that has to be remediated by phytoremediation. The concentrations of heavy metals in the original soil (O-Soil) produced phytotoxic effects with a strong reduction in biomass yield that hinder the utilization of this technology. To overcome phytotoxicity the use of three immobilizing agents was evaluated. The results obtained showed that all the strategies decreased the mobile fractions of heavy metals in soil and increased the metal removal efficiency. In the case of Brassica juncea the best results for Zn and Ni were obtained after zeolites addition (Z-Soil) with an increase of about 6 times with respect to the value found in the O-Soil. In the case of Cu, the more efficient treatment was Ca(OH)(2) addition (Ca-Soil). The B. juncea plants accumulated Cu amounts 8 times greater than in the O-Soil. For this metal, relevant results were obtained also with compost, that increased the amount of Cu in the plants of 7 times with respect to the O-Soil. Similar results were obtained with Helianthus annuus the highest Zn and Ni accumulation was detected in the Z-Soil and compost-treated soils (C-Soil), with an increase of nearly 11 times with respect to the accumulation in the O-Soil. In the case of Cu the highest increase of total uptake was found in the C-Soil: 28 times higher than in the O-Soil. Total accumulation in Poa annua plants showed the highest removal efficiency in the Z-Soil for all metals. The values obtained increased of 4, 11 and 12 times for Cu, Zn and Ni, respectively. SN - 1879-1298 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/19217142/Strategies_to_use_phytoextraction_in_very_acidic_soil_contaminated_by_heavy_metals_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0045-6535(09)00083-6 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -