4.7 Article

Tartaric acid coupled with gibberellin improves remediation efficiency and ensures safe production of crops: A new strategy for phytoremediation

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 908, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.168319

Keywords

Heavy metal contamination; Phytoremediation; Rotation mode; Auxiliary measures

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This study investigated the effect of different measures on the rotation of rape-kenaf and rape-sweet sorghum in polluted farmland. The results showed that the rotation systems coupled with specific measures greatly increased crop yield and enhanced the uptake of Cd and Pb, effectively accelerating phytoremediation. The rotation systems also met safety standards for food and forage, and demonstrated economic value.
Phytoremediation is the direct use of living green plants and it is an effective, inexpensive, non-invasive, and environmentally friendly technique used to transfer or stabilize all the toxic metals and environmental pollutants in polluted soil or ground water. To study the effect of tartaric acid, gibberellin, and tartaric acid coupled with gibberellin on rape-kenaf or rape-sweet sorghum rotation, a field experiment was carried out on a farmland combined polluted with Cd and Pb in eastern Hunan Province, China. The results showed that these two rotation systems coupled with superposition measure has potential to enhance yield and biomass of rape (Brassica napus L.), kenaf (Hibiscus cannabinus) and sweet sorghum (Sorghum dochna (F.) Snowden), as well as to increase Cd and Pb uptake of the three crops, thus accelerating phytoextraction. The Cd and Pb annual removal by rape-kenaf rotation in one year under different treatments were 269-438 and 112-149 g & sdot;hm- 2, respectively. And the Cd and Pb annual removal by rape-sweet sorghum rotation in one year under different treatments were 68.0-111 and 43.8-92.3 g & sdot;hm- 2, respectively. Under the two rotation systems, these integrated management measures can remove Cd and Pb up to 438 g & sdot;hm- 2 & sdot;year- 1 and 149 g & sdot;hm- 2 & sdot;year- 1, respectively. The Cd and Pb content in rape seeds or sweet sorghum stems and leaves were lower than the food or forage standard, indicating that we can use this rotation system for both remediation and safety production. Furthermore, the two rotation systems also generated considerable economic value. These results showed that the combination of phytoremediation and agricultural production is a feasible technical mode in the field of Cd and Pb co-contamination, and also provides useful information for further study of the interaction mechanism between rotation crops and enhancement measures. In subsequent experiments we can set concentration gradients for tartaric acid and gibberellin, and we can also select other crops for rotation, with a view to finding the optimal auxiliary measure and crop rotation modern.

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