4.5 Article

Extremely High Soil Copper Content, yet Low Phytotoxicity: A Unique Case of Monometallic Soil Pollution at Kargaly, Russia

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ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY
卷 42, 期 3, 页码 707-713

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/etc.5562

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Contamination; Lolium perenne; Ecotoxicity

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Ecotoxicological studies on soil metal toxicity often rely on artificially contaminated soils. One difficulty is the presence of multiple metals, making it difficult to distinguish the toxic effects of a particular metal. A site in Russia with monometallic pollution from copper mining was studied, and it was found that high copper content did not affect plant growth in the soil.
Ecotoxicological studies on soil metal toxicity often rely on artificially contaminated soils. A major difficulty in using soils contaminated by anthropogenic activities (e.g., mining and agriculture) is the presence of multiple metals, which can make it impossible to distinguish the toxic effects of a particular metal. Therefore, sites with monometallic pollution have great potential for ecotoxicological research. One such site is an agricultural field in Kargaly, Orenburg region, Russia, where copper mining and smelting activities were carried out during the 18th-20th centuries. Samples of Mollisols (chernozems) were collected in the studied field. At several sampling points there were copper ore rocks on the surface, containing malachite (CuCO3 center dot Cu(OH)(2)). The soil samples had a high copper content, up to approximately 10 g kg(-1), compared with 75 mg kg(-1) in the background soil. Importantly, the content of other elements in all soil samples was similar to that in the background soil, highlighting the uniqueness of the monometallic contamination in the study area. Despite the extremely high total copper content, exchangeable copper was relatively low, with a maximum of approximately 0.5 mg kg(-1). We performed a short-term (21-day) ecotoxicity assessment using perennial ryegrass as an indicator of copper toxicity. Contrary to expectations, plant growth was not affected by the high copper content in the studied soils. The low copper phytotoxicity may be explained by the low solubility of malachite. However, future long-term experiments may be warranted to determine copper toxicity thresholds for plants under field conditions. The site discovered in the present study could potentially acquire the same significance as the Danish Hygum site for the study of monometallic soil contamination. Environ Toxicol Chem 2023;00:1-7. (c) 2023 SETAC

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