4.7 Article

Heavy Metals Assimilation by Native and Non-Native Aquatic Macrophyte Species: A Case Study of a River in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa

期刊

PLANTS-BASEL
卷 10, 期 12, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10122676

关键词

bio-concentration factor; enrichment factor; geo-accumulation index; metal contamination; phytoremediation; water quality

资金

  1. NRF SARChI Chair [84643]
  2. Department of Environmental Affairs, Natural Resource Management Programme, Working for Water Programme South Africa
  3. South African Research Chairs Initiative of the Department of Science and Technology
  4. National Research Foundation of South Africa

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The research found that native and non-native macrophytes have varying effects on the Swartkops River system's remediation, with potential for improvement. However, the system is heavily impacted by multiple non-point sources of pollution, compromising the plants' ability to absorb pollutants.
There is continuous deterioration of freshwater systems globally due to excessive anthropogenic inputs, which severely affect important socio-economic and ecological services. We investigated the water and sediment quality at 10 sites along the severely modified Swartkops River system in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa and then quantified the phytoremediation potential by native and non-native macrophyte species over a period of 6 months. We hypothesized that the presence of semi and permanent native and non-native macrophytes mats would reduce water and sediment contamination through assimilation downriver. Our results were variable and, thus, inconsistent with our hypotheses; there were no clear trends in water and sediment quality improvement along the Swartkops River. Although variable, the free-floating non-native macrophyte, Pontederia (=Eichhornia) crassipes recorded the highest assimilation potential of heavy metals in water (e.g., Fe and Cu) and sediments (e.g., Fe and Zn), followed by a submerged native macrophyte, Stuckenia pectinatus, and three native emergent species, Typha capensis, Cyperus sexangularis, and Phragmites australis. Pollution indices clearly showed the promising assimilation by native and non-native macrophytes species; however, the Swartkops River was heavily influenced by multiple non-point sources along the system, compromising the assimilation effect. Furthermore, we emphasise that excessive anthropogenic inputs compromise the system's ability to assimilate heavy metals inputs leading to water quality deterioration.

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