| Literature DB >> 30648407 |
Anwar Ahmad1, Sajjal Sreedhar Reddy1, Ghufran Rumana2.
Abstract
To assess the tolerance, the rye-grass L. grown on soil amended with petroleum wastewater (PWW) containing four metals lead, zinc, nickel and mercury. The PWW (25 to 50%) showed remarkable increase in length and biomass. Chlorophyll 'a and b' increased with an increase of PWW from 25-50% while such contents decreased on increasing the 75-100% compared to control. The mass balance performed on the system showed the removal of 90-97.6% lead, 85.5-92.9% zinc, 78.9-85.5% nickle and 47.6-27.5% mercury. The model for the maximum metal reduction rate (Rmax) was much better for Pb (89.5) and Zn (72.1) with respect to Ni (57.3) and Hg (32.4). Survival of rye-grass (30-days, statics, and renewal exposures) was increased by 50% as compared to control. The toxicity index Y of PWW showed 0-25% deficiency level, 25-50% tolerance level, 50-90% toxic level and 90-100% lethal level. The experimental data showing high correlation coefficient (R2 = 0.98).Entities:
Keywords: L; Reduction rates rmax; petroleum wastewater; phytoremediation; toxicity index
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30648407 DOI: 10.1080/15226514.2018.1537243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Phytoremediation ISSN: 1522-6514 Impact factor: 3.212