4.6 Article

Use of transfer factors to characterize uptake of selenium by plants

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOCHEMICAL EXPLORATION
Volume 107, Issue 2, Pages 206-216

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gexplo.2010.09.009

Keywords

Selenium; Transfer factors

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The radioactive selenium isotope Se-79 can be a component of radioactive waste produced in nuclear power plants The accidental release of Se-79 in the environment from power plants or nuclear waste repositories and subsequent transfer of Se-79 into soils plants and food chain are relevant concerns in Europe In environmental risk assessment models the ability of plants to take up Se is often characterized by means of soil to-plant transfer factors (IF) However these recommendations take little or no account of the variability in plant Se accumulation among plant species and differences in Se distribution between plant parts Also such factors as soil type form of Se climatic conditions as well as the chemical form in which Se is present in the soil are not taken into consideration This paper reviews the current knowledge on Se uptake by plants and compiles published data on the transfer of Se from soils and nutrient solutions into plants The data were categorized according to the form of Se supply i e when added as either selenate or selenite to nutrient solutions or soils or whether plant Se accumulation was studied on soil containing only natural-occurring Se (native Se) Plant Se accumulation can vary more than two orders of magnitudes at a given soil Se concentration for a specific form of soil Se (i e native soil Se Se added as selenate or as selenite) among different plant taxa Differences observed in the transfer of Se from soil into plants appear to result primarily from differences in the solubility of Se species in soil and only to a minor degree from differences in plant uptake efficiency among these species Values of the TF for Se were found to lie between 0 01 and 100 with few exceptions Transfer factor values derived from studies in which Se was added to soil as selenate or selenite were generally found to be one or more orders of magnitude higher for a given plant species and plant part than TF values derived for native Se Situations where radioactive Se has been accidentally released into the environment may be better represented by TF values for experimentally added Se than by TF values computed for native soil Se The uncertainty in selecting a TF value for modeling Se transfer from soil into plants can be substantially reduced by identifying the predominant Se form in the soil the plant species and the target plant parts The large variability in TF values suggests that It is still Important to understand the complexity of the soil-plant system when selecting TF values to assess risks arising from the transfer of accidentally released Se-79 from soil into plants Published by Elsevier B V

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