4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Assessment of heavy metal tolerance in two plant species growing in experimental disturbed polluted urban soil

Journal

JOURNAL OF SOILS AND SEDIMENTS
Volume 18, Issue 6, Pages 2305-2317

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11368-017-1666-8

Keywords

Copper; Lead; Metal mobility; Phytoextraction; Soil pollution; Zinc

Funding

  1. Spanish government

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Urban soil, which is strongly influenced by anthropogenic activities, receives a major proportion of trace metal wastes. The aim of this work was to determine heavy metal concentration in (a) soil, to know the degree of the soil pollution; (b) roots and leaves of two plant species, Brassica juncea as an accumulator plant and Solanum lycopersicum as a crop plant; and (c) drainage water, to evaluate the heavy metal mobility. The study area is located in Sants, a neighborhood in Barcelona (Catalonia, Spain). Thirty kilograms of two representative soil depths (0-15 and 15-40 cm) was sampled and subsequently mixed. The two studied species were cultivated for 3 weeks in greenhouse conditions, and all pots were irrigated with water weekly to field capacity with a nutrient solution (pH = 6.5). If not otherwise stated, given results are means +/- standard deviation of four replicated pots each with a composite sample of 12 individual plants per treatment. X-ray fluorescence (FRX) and diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid soil extraction (DTPA) were used for total and available metal soil contents, respectively. Weekly cumulative drainage water of each pot was collected in polyethylene bottles and stored at 4 A degrees C until analysis. The main pollutants are Cu, Pb, and Zn with topsoil total concentrations of approximately 1355, 2230, and 6239 mg kg(-1), respectively. The same soil elements for available fractions were slightly elevated (9.6, 5.8, and 6.7% of total concentration). The concentrations of Cu, Pb, and Zn in the plants' leaves are greater in B. juncea than in S. lycopersicum. Furthermore, they are greater in the roots than in leaves. The Pb concentrations in a crop plant exceeded the 0.10 mg kg(-1) limit established for vegetables devoted for food in the European legislation. Unusually elevated concentrations of Pb (over 10 mu g L-1) were detected in the drainage water. These values exceeded the acceptable toxic concentrations in waters, according to the Spanish legislation. The urban soil studied was highly contaminated by Cu, Pb, and Zn, and this pollution is more evident in the topsoil. A great part of these heavy metals was bioavailable for plants. Thus, the two plants (S. lycopersicum and B. juncea) had an ability to transport heavy metals from the roots to the shoots, especially for Zn. Great contents of heavy metals in the drainage water after the irrigation of plants were observed.

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