4.7 Article

Effects of high dose copper on plant growth and mineral nutrient (Zn, Fe, Mg, K, Ca) uptake in spinach

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 28, Pages 37471-37481

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-13395-7

Keywords

Copper; Nutrients; Loessal soil; Uptake; Translocation; PLS-PM; Plant toxicity

Funding

  1. PhD scientific research start-up capital of Lanzhou City University [LZCU-BS2018-15]
  2. Gansu Natural Science Foundation [18JR3RA220]
  3. Open fund project of Kay Laboratory of Polymer Materials of Ministry of Education of Ecological Environment [KF-18-04]

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The contamination of loessal soil by copper from industrial wastewater irrigation affects the growth of spinach plants and the uptake of mineral nutrients, resulting in an increase in certain mineral nutrient concentrations in roots and a decrease in leaves.
Loessal soil is one of the main cultivated soils in northwest China. Part of its distribution area was irrigated with industrial wastewater in past three decades. This caused heavy metal contamination in the soil. It had induced toxicity on crops and also threatened local human health for now. Based on a field plot experiment, effects of different Cu concentrations (from 45 to 2000 mg kg(-1)) in loessal soil on spinach plant growth and uptake of mineral nutrients (Zn, Fe, Mg, K, and Ca) by spinach were investigated. The Cu addition increased available concentrations of mineral nutrients in loessal soil and concentrations of Cu, Zn, Mg, and Ca in roots. The translocation of mineral nutrients from roots to leaves was inhibited under Cu addition, inducing their decrease in leaves. The EC10 and EC50 of soil Cu in relative dry weights of leaves were 240.33 mg kg(-1) and 1205.04 mg kg(-1), respectively. The PLS-PM analysis showed that available concentrations of nutrients in soil were only affected by Cu in soil positively, nutrients in roots were mainly affected by Cu in soil and Cu in leaves positively, nutrients in leaves were mainly affected by Cu in roots negatively, translocation of nutrients in spinach and plant growth were principally affected by Cu in leaves negatively, and the total effect of Cu in leaves on nutrients in roots and leaves, translocation of nutrients in spinach, and plant growth was the highest. Our results indicated that the phytotoxicity of Cu including spinach growth inhibition and mineral disorder in spinach was mainly affected by the Cu concentrations in leaves.

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