4.7 Article

Hysteresis of heavy metals uptake induced in Taraxacum officinale by thiuram

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-99666-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Regional Fund for Environmental Protection and Water Management in Lodz, Poland [804/BNID/2016, 58/BN/D2018]
  2. Institute of General and Ecological Chemistry of Lodz University of Technology

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This study evaluated the long-term effects of the fungicide thiuram on dandelion growth and photosynthesis, finding that the decomposition of thiuram promoted plant growth and significantly affected the uptake and transport of heavy metals. This resulted in a phenomenon termed as "hysteresis of heavy metals uptake" in the soil-plant system.
Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) yields active substances frequently used in herbal medicinal preparations. Its plantations are exposed to fungal plagues which pose a threat to herbal crops. The aim of this study was to evaluate the long time effects of a fungicide thiuram on dandelion growth and photosynthesis. Additionally, the manganese, iron, copper, zinc, cadmium, and lead uptake and transport were also investigated. Plants were cultivated under greenhouse conditions by the pot method in a universal flowering soil. The elements content in soil and plants were determined by the HR-CS FAAS spectrometer. Thiuram concentrations were established by the HPLC. Those analyses showed that almost 80% of thiuram decomposed within two weeks of its application. The photosynthesis indicators suggested, that plants were in good conditions and the fungicide supplementation facilitated plant growth. The latter could be prompted by thiuram acting as a sulfur rich chemical micro fertilizer. The hypothesis, that thiuram significantly affects heavy metals interactions in dandelion was proved by the one-way analysis of variance. Notable, metals uptake did not completely recover after fungicide decomposition for all investigated elements except iron We suggest to define this chemically induced, time-dependent heavy metals migrations in the soil-plant system as hysteresis of heavy metals uptake.

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