4.7 Article

Trophic Transfer without Biomagnification of Cadmium in a Soybean-Dodder Parasitic System

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10122690

Keywords

Cuscuta; food chain; feeding mode; heavy metal; holoparasite; host; parasitic plants

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The research found that the transfer pattern of cadmium in parasitic systems is influenced by the cadmium treatment levels, with parasitic plants having lower cadmium concentration and accumulation.
Cadmium (Cd) is among the most available and most toxic heavy metals taken up by plants from soil. Compared to the classic plant-animal food chains, the host-parasitic plant food chains have, thus far, been largely overlooked in the studies of Cd trophic transfer. To investigate the pattern of Cd transfer during the infection of parasitic plants on Cd-contaminated hosts, we conducted a controlled experiment that grew soybeans parasitized by Chinese dodders (Cuscuta chinensis) in soil with different levels of Cd treatment, and examined the concentration, accumulation, allocation and transfer coefficients of Cd within this parasitic system. Results showed that among all components, dodders accounted for more than 40% biomass of the whole system but had the lowest Cd concentration and accumulated the least amount of Cd. The transfer coefficient of Cd between soybean stems and dodders was much lower than 1, and was also significantly lower than that between soybean stems and soybean leaves. All these features were continuously strengthened with the increase of Cd treatment levels. The results suggested no evidence of Cd biomagnification in dodders parasitizing Cd-contaminated hosts, and implied that the Cd transfer from hosts to dodders may be a selective process.

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