| Literature DB >> 24085602 |
Aleksandra Nadgórska-Socha1, Bartłomiej Ptasiński, Andrzej Kita.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine the concentrations of heavy metals (cadmium, lead, zinc, copper, iron and manganese) in soil, their bioavailability and bioaccumulation in plants leaves. This study also examined their influences on the antioxidant response of the plants Cardaminopsis arenosa and Plantago lanceolata grown in metal-contaminated and non-contaminated soils. The activities of guaiacol peroxidase and superoxide dismutase and the levels of antioxidants such as glutathione, proline and non-protein thiols were measured. Concentrations of the examined metals were several to thousands of times lower in the potentially bioavailable fraction than in the acid-extracted fraction of the soil. Similar mode of antioxidant responses in plant leaves of metalliferous populations indicates the tolerance of plants towards heavy metals. However POD and GSHt had a particularly strong role in defense reactions, as their increase was the most common reaction to heavy metal contamination.The levels of Zn, Cd and Pb in the leaves of C. arenosa better reflected metal concentrations in the metalliferous and non-metalliferous soil than the determined metal concentrations in P. lanceolata. Bioaccumulated Zn, Cd and Pb concentrations were above or in the ranges mentioned as toxic for plant tissues and therefore the studied plants have potential for use in phytostabilization.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24085602 PMCID: PMC3824952 DOI: 10.1007/s10646-013-1129-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecotoxicology ISSN: 0963-9292 Impact factor: 2.823
Geographic location and ecological background of the C. arenosa and P. lanceolata investigated natural populations
| Name | Habitat | Origin of contamination | Latitude | Longitude | Vegetation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Miasteczko Śląskie (M1) | Roadside | Metallurgic acivity since 1967 | 50°31′22.655″N | 18°56′8.699″E |
|
| Katowice-Szopienice (M2) | Grassland | Metallurgic acivity since 1834 | 50°15′29.65″N | 19°6′42.88″E |
|
| Dąbrowa Górnicza (M3) | Forest edge and grassland | Mining activities during 19th century | 50°18′58.859″N | 19°18′28.62″E |
|
| Bolesław (M4) | Grassland | Mining activities since 19th century | 50°17′11.472″N | 19°28′5.231″E |
|
| Pazurek (NM) | Forest edge | – | 50°19′58.74″N | 19°35′59.82″E |
|
The concentrations of selected metals in fractions of the soils extracted with HNO3 and CaCl2 [mg kg−1], organic matter content [%], N, C, S [%] and pH value from investigated sites
| Metal/stand | M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 | NM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cd (HNO3) | 6.1 a | 90.8 b | 301.2 d | 175.6 c | 2.7 e |
| Zn (HNO3) | 2,878.3 a | 8,403.3 b | 70,445.8 c | 68,570.8 c | 358.8 d |
| Pb (HNO3) | 959.1 a | 394.7 b | 3,619.1 d | 4,230.9 c | 123.1 e |
| Cu (HNO3) | 11.2 a | 34.3 b | 74.1 d | 8.5 c | 12.9 a |
| Mn (HNO3) | 65.7 a | 236.7 b | 768.0 c | 779.2 c | 64.7 a |
| Fe (HNO3) | 1,273.9 a | 1,740.8 b | 2,632.5 d | 2,027.0 c | 1,380.3 e |
| Cd (CaCl2) | 0.2 a | 11.2 b | 2.3 d | 1.2 c | 0.6 a |
| Mn (CaCl2) | 5.1 a | 2.3 b | 3.1 d | 2.1 c | 1.7 e |
| Zn (CaCl2) | 32.4 a | 374.0 b | 22.0 c | 34.8 a | 11.5 d |
| Organic matter content | 2.1 a | 3.1 a | 12.0 b | 14.0 b | 11.9 b |
| pH | 7.5 a | 7.3 b | 7.4 a | 7.3 b | 5.6 c |
| N | 0.1 a | 0.1 a | 0.3 b | 0.4 c | 0.3 b |
| C | 1.1 a | 1.5 b | 8.8 c | 11.3 d | 4.4 e |
| S | 0.03 a | 0.07 b | 0.02 c | 0.03 a | 0.04 d |
The different letters denote significant differences between the particular metal concentrations in the fraction extracted with HNO3, extracted with CaCl2, organic matter contents and pH values (p < 0.05)
The concentrations of heavy metals (mg kg−1 d.w.) in the leaves of C. arenosa
| Stand metal | M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 | NM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cd | 45.6 a | 41.5 a | 12.9 c | 100.2 b | 1.4 d |
| Pb | 256.6 a | 30.8 b | 94.5 d | 70.8 c | 6.2 e |
| Zn | 3,054.1 a | 5,438.7 b | 2,828.0 ac | 2,594.9 c | 256.9 d |
| Cu | 4.8 a | 2.3 b | 3.9 d | 0.8 c | 2.2 b |
| Fe | 274.1 a | 365.7 b | 2,588.3 d | 170.5 c | 279.8 a |
| Mn | 62.3 a | 12.9 b | 74.3 c | 11.8 b | 23.8 d |
The different letters denote significant differences between the metal concentration in plants from metalliferous and non-metalliferous populations (p < 0.05)
The concentrations of heavy metals (mg kg−1 d.w.) in the leaves of P. lanceolata
| Metal/stand | M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 | NM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cd | 13.8 a | 9.1 b | 5.7 b | 7.1 b | 1.0 c |
| Pb | 107.2 a | 121.3 b | 67.5 d | 19.5 c | 0.03 e |
| Zn | 372.9 a | 209.8 b | 420.1 a | 219.1 b | 101.3 c |
| Cu | 6.2 a | 3.5 a | 1.2 b | 4.1 a | 3.2 c |
| Fe | 232.7 a | 208.2 a | 1,065.6 b | 175.7 a | 218.7 a |
| Mn | 13.5 a | 7.0 b | 22.7 c | 9.5 a | 6.1 b |
The different letters denote significant differences between the metal concentration in plants from metalliferous and non-metalliferous populations (p < 0.05)
Fig. 1GSHt content in P. lanceolata and C. arenosa leaves
The correlation coefficients between metal concentration and antioxidant measurements in the leaves of Cardaminopsis arenosa plants (p < 0.05)
| PRO | GSHt | SH | SOD | POD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cd | 0.52 | 0.92 | −0.58 | NS | −0.42 |
| Zn | NS | 0.51 | NS | NS | 0.40 |
| Pb | 0.43 | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Cu | −0.10 | −0.51 | NS | 0.50 | 0.68 |
| Fe | −0.79 | −0.42 | −0.46 | 0.95 | 0.76 |
| Mn | −0.27 | −0.52 | NS | 0.85 | 0.74 |
NS not significant
The correlation coefficients between metal concentration and antioxidant measurements in the leaves of Plantago lanceolata plants (p < 0.05)
| PRO | GSHt | SH | SOD | POD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cd | −0.59 | NS | NS | NS | 0.73 |
| Zn | −0.74 | NS | NS | NS | 0.41 |
| Pb | −0.45 | 0.53 | 0.51 | NS | 0.86 |
| Cu | NS | NS | 0.61 | −0.67 | 0.59 |
| Mn | −0.53 | NS | NS | 0.76 | NS |
| Fe | NS | NS | NS | 0.80 | −0.46 |
NS not significant
Fig. 2Non-protein -SH group content in P. lanceolata and C. arenosa leaves
Fig. 3Proline content in P. lanceolata and C. arenosa leaves
Fig. 4POD activity in P. lanceolata and C. arenosa leaves
Fig. 5SOD activity in P. lanceolata and C. arenosa leaves
Fig. 6Principal component analysis performed on C. arenosa biochemical parameters and elements contents in the plants on investigated areas
Fig. 7Principal component analysis performed on P. lanceolata biochemical parameters and elements contents in the plants on investigated areas
Heavy metals concentration previously reported as toxic for plants, cut-off of heavy metals concentration used to define plant hyperaccumulators in comparison to heavy metals allowable concentration in soil (in mg∙kg−1)
| Toxic concentration in plantsa,c | Hyperaccumulation limitsa | Allowable | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cd | 5–30 | 100 | 4 |
| Zn | 100–400 | 10,000 | 300 |
| Pb | 30–300 | 1,000 | 100 |
| Cu | 20–100 | 1,000 | 150 |
| Mn | 400–1,000 | 10,000 | – |
| Fe | – | 10,000 | – |
aMassa et al. (2010)
bThe regulation of Environment Minister about the standards of soil and ground quality (2002)
cKabata-Pendias (2001)