Journal
PLANT AND SOIL
Volume 258, Issue 1-2, Pages 217-226Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1023/B:PLSO.0000016552.12451.95
Keywords
cadmium; desorption isotherm; leaching; plant availability
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Experiments on Cd desorption were conducted with a range of water-to-soil ratios to assess the desorption characteristics of Cd in soils and the availability of Cd for absorption by plant roots and leaching to groundwater, Soil samples were collected from sites contaminated by a former Pb and Zn smelter, by sewage irrigation, or with artificial additions of Cd and sewage sludge. Glasshouse pot experiments were conducted in which the yield and Cd uptake of crop plants were determined. Cadmium leached from soil columns was also studied using soil lysimeters. The soil solution Cd concentration decreased with increasing solution- to-soil ratio and followed a negative power function. Two constants obtained from logarithmic linear regression were identified. The intercept (C-1) was Cd concentration in the soil solution where the solution/soil ratio was equal to 1 and this constant was the intensity factor of the initial element supply in the soil. The slope ( a) showed a decreasing trend for Cd concentration in the soil solution which was related to the soil buffering capacity. A corrected concentration (C-1/a) is proposed for expressing soil desorption ability. This combined index was significantly correlated with Cd uptake by plants and also with Cd leached from soil columns.
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