Author:
Hamon R.,Wundke J.,McLaughlin M.,Naidu R.
Abstract
A pot study was conducted to investigate whether differences in the amounts of
Zn and Cd taken up by a number of plant species (canola, capeweed,
subterranean clover, lettuce, swiss chard, ryegrass, and wheat) growing in a
single soil could be explained as the result of plants having access to
different soil pools of Zn and Cd. Prior to potting, the soil was spiked with
carrier-free 65Zn and 109Cd. Total
shoot concentrations of both Zn and Cd varied greatly across the plant species
studied. The concentration of Cd in the shoots ranged from 0·075
mg/kg in wheat cv. RAC to 2·27 mg/kg in capeweed, while the
concentration of Zn in the shoots ranged from 33 mg/kg in wheat cv. RAC to
259 mg/kg in swiss chard. However, the specific activity of Zn in the
shoots was found to be the same in all cases. Hence the experiments showed
that all plant species were accessing the same pool of Zn in the soil, despite
differences in the total amounts of Zn taken up. In contrast, the specific
activity of Cd in canola was found to be nearly double the specific activity
of Cd in the other plants, suggesting that canola was unable to access a pool
of soil Cd that was available for uptake by the other species. The percentage
of total soil Zn and Cd that was in bioavailable pools was calculated to be
approximately 12 and 36 (or 20% for canola), respectively, implying
that significant percentages of these metals exist in non plant available
forms in this soil.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
70 articles.
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