4.7 Article

Woody biomass phytoremediation of contaminated brownfield land

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 141, Issue 3, Pages 387-395

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2005.08.065

Keywords

brownfield; heavy metals; trees; coppice

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Economic and environmental regeneration of post-industrial landscapes frequently involves some element of re-afforestation or tree planting. We report field trials that evaluate whether woody biomass production is compatible with managing residual trace element contamination in brownfield soils. Large-scale mapping of contamination showed a heterogenous dispersion of metals and arsenic, and highly localised within-site hotspots. Yields of Salix, Populus and Alnus were economically viable, showing that short-rotation coppice has a potentially valuable role in community forestry. Mass balance modelling demonstrated that phytoextraction potentially could reduce contamination hotspots of more mobile elements (Cd and Zn) within a 25-30-year life cycle of the crops. Cd and Zn in sterns and foliage of Salix were 4-13 times higher than EDTA-extractable soil concentrations. Lability of other trace elements (As, Pb, Cu, Ni) was not increased 3 years after planting the coppice; woody biomass may provide an effective reduction of exposure (phytostabilisation) to these less mobile contaminants. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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