| Literature DB >> 26628931 |
Abstract
Monitoring air pollutants via plants is an economic, convenient and credible method compared with the traditional ways. Plants show different damage symptoms to different air pollutants, which can be used to determine the species of air pollutants. Besides, pollutants mass concentration scope can be estimated by the damage extent of plants and the span of polluted time. Based on the domestic and foreign research, this paper discusses the principles, mechanism, advantages and disadvantages of plant-monitoring, and exemplifies plenty of such plants and the minimum mass concentration and pollution time of the plants showing damage symptoms. Finally, this paper introduced the human health effects of air pollutants on immune function of the body, such as decrease of the body's immune function, decline of lung function, respiratory and circulatory system changes, inducing and promoting human allergic diseases, respiratory diseases and other diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Air pollutants; biological monitoring; damage symptoms; health; plants
Year: 2015 PMID: 26628931 PMCID: PMC4645973 DOI: 10.2174/1874120701509010219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Biomed Eng J ISSN: 1874-1207
The average concentration of air pollutants at different time.
| Air pollutants | Mean time | Primary concentration limit on average /μg·m-3 | Secondary concentration limit on average /μg·m-3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| SO2 | 1h | 150 | 500 |
| 24h | 50 | 150 | |
| 1a | 20 | 60 | |
| NO2 | 1h | 200 | 200 |
| 24h | 80 | 80 | |
| 1a | 40 | 40 | |
| CO | 1h | 10 | 10 |
| 24h | 4 | 4 | |
| O3 | 1h | 160 | 200 |
| 8h | 100 | 160 | |
| PM10 | 24h | 50 | 150 |
| 1a | 40 | 70 | |
| PM2.5 | 24h | 35 | 75 |
| 1a | 15 | 35 |
Symptoms of endangered plants by several kinds of harmful air pollutants.
| Air pollutants | Damage mechanism | Injury spot area | Injury spot shape | Injury spot color | Age and degree of the damaged leaf |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SO2 | Induce plasmolysis of spongy cells and palisade cells, then shrink or collapse, chlorophyll decomposition | Mainly pulse, occasionally leaf margin | Irregular points, block, clear boundaries | Brown, red brown | Expanded leaves > old leaves and mature leaves > unfolded leaves |
| fluoride | Induce plasmolysis of mesophyll and cell | Mainly leaves and margin, occasionally pulse | A strip or band | Pale brown | Young leaves > mature leaf > old leaf |
| O3 | Destruct cell wall of palisade tissue and epidermal cells, oxidize glucose | Mainly leaf surface, occasionally pulse | Scattered dense punctate | Brown, tawny | Mature leaves > young leaves > old leaves |
| Peroxyacyl nitrates(PAN) | Induce leaves to shrink, loss water, and then be filled into the air | Mainly blade back, occasionally leaf tip | Glass, necrotic zone | Silvery white, brown, tan | Young leaves tip and old leaves base vulnerable |
| NO2 | Break cell | Pulse | Irregular spot or whole leaf spot | White, tawny, brown | Young leaves vulnerable |
| Chlorine and chloride | Destruct chlorophyll | Pulse | Point block boundaries or transition | Severe chlorosis, bleaching | Mature leaves vulnerable |
Plants situation around 30 ~ 50 m of chemical factories.
| Plant | Situation |
|---|---|
| Hung ling wood, poplar, Canada, Sabina chinensis, towel gourd | Above 80% leaves suffered and even fell off, leaves had obvious large scars, part of the plants died. |
| Sunflower, onion, corn, chrysanthemum, morning glory | About 50% foliar surface was damaged, there were point and block-shaped scars between leaf veins |
| Chinese rose, rose, Chinese wolfberry, cedar, cypress | About 30% foliar surface was damaged, there were a little few point and block-shaped scars between leaf veins |
| Grape, honeysuckle, medlar, purslane | About 10% foliar surface was damaged, there were a little few point -shaped scars between leaf veins |
| Magnolia, big leaf boxwood, gardenia, wintersweet | No obvious symptoms |
An investigation for genus, species and number of lichens at different distances from a factory.
| Sampling number | Distance from the factory /m | Number of genus | Number of species |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 100 | 3 | 5 |
| B | 450 | 3 | 7 |
| C | 1100 | 4 | 9 |
| D | 1350 | 5 | 11 |
| E | 1600 | 7 | 15 |
| F | 2600 | 9 | 26 |
| G | 6500 | 12 | 39 |