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Large-area experiment on uptake of metals by twelve plants growing in soils contaminated with multiple metals.
Int J Phytoremediation. 2010 Oct-Dec; 12(8):785-97.IJ

Abstract

A site in central Taiwan with an area of 1.3 ha and contaminated with Cr, Cu, Ni, and Zn was selected to examine the feasibility of phytoextraction. Based on the results of a preexperiment at this site, a total of approximately 20,000 plants of 12 species were selected from plants of 33 tested species to be used in a large-area phytoextraction experiment at this site. A comparison with the initial metal concentration of 12 plant species before planting demonstrated that most species accumulated significant amounts of Cr, Cu, Ni, and Zn in their shoots after growing in this contaminated site for 31 d. Among the 12 plant species, the following accumulated higher concentrations of metals in their shoots; Garden canna and Garden verbena (45-60 mg Cr kg(-1)), Chinese ixora and Kalanchoe (30 mg Cu kg(-1)), Rainbow pink and Sunflower (30 mg Ni kg(-1)), French marigold and Sunflower (300-470 mg Zn kg(-1)). The roots of the plants of most of the 12 plant species can accumulate higher concentrations of metals than the shoots and extending the growth period promotes accumulation in the shoots. Large-area experiments demonstrated that phytoextraction is a feasible method to enable metal-contaminated soil in central Taiwan to be reused.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Post-Modern Agriculture, MingDao University, Changhua, Taiwan.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

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

Language

eng

PubMed ID

21166348

Citation

Lai, Hung-Yu, et al. "Large-area Experiment On Uptake of Metals By Twelve Plants Growing in Soils Contaminated With Multiple Metals." International Journal of Phytoremediation, vol. 12, no. 8, 2010, pp. 785-97.
Lai HY, Juang KW, Chen ZS. Large-area experiment on uptake of metals by twelve plants growing in soils contaminated with multiple metals. Int J Phytoremediation. 2010;12(8):785-97.
Lai, H. Y., Juang, K. W., & Chen, Z. S. (2010). Large-area experiment on uptake of metals by twelve plants growing in soils contaminated with multiple metals. International Journal of Phytoremediation, 12(8), 785-97. https://doi.org/10.1080/15226510903534554
Lai HY, Juang KW, Chen ZS. Large-area Experiment On Uptake of Metals By Twelve Plants Growing in Soils Contaminated With Multiple Metals. Int J Phytoremediation. 2010 Oct-Dec;12(8):785-97. PubMed PMID: 21166348.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Large-area experiment on uptake of metals by twelve plants growing in soils contaminated with multiple metals. AU - Lai,Hung-Yu, AU - Juang,Kai-Wei, AU - Chen,Zueng-Sang, PY - 2010/12/21/entrez PY - 2010/12/21/pubmed PY - 2011/3/4/medline SP - 785 EP - 97 JF - International journal of phytoremediation JO - Int J Phytoremediation VL - 12 IS - 8 N2 - A site in central Taiwan with an area of 1.3 ha and contaminated with Cr, Cu, Ni, and Zn was selected to examine the feasibility of phytoextraction. Based on the results of a preexperiment at this site, a total of approximately 20,000 plants of 12 species were selected from plants of 33 tested species to be used in a large-area phytoextraction experiment at this site. A comparison with the initial metal concentration of 12 plant species before planting demonstrated that most species accumulated significant amounts of Cr, Cu, Ni, and Zn in their shoots after growing in this contaminated site for 31 d. Among the 12 plant species, the following accumulated higher concentrations of metals in their shoots; Garden canna and Garden verbena (45-60 mg Cr kg(-1)), Chinese ixora and Kalanchoe (30 mg Cu kg(-1)), Rainbow pink and Sunflower (30 mg Ni kg(-1)), French marigold and Sunflower (300-470 mg Zn kg(-1)). The roots of the plants of most of the 12 plant species can accumulate higher concentrations of metals than the shoots and extending the growth period promotes accumulation in the shoots. Large-area experiments demonstrated that phytoextraction is a feasible method to enable metal-contaminated soil in central Taiwan to be reused. SN - 1522-6514 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/21166348/Large_area_experiment_on_uptake_of_metals_by_twelve_plants_growing_in_soils_contaminated_with_multiple_metals_ L2 - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15226510903534554 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -