Lichens as Biomonitors of Air Pollutants Deposition: Strategically Important Element Pollution
Author:
ARSLAN TOPAL Emine Işıl1ORCID, TOPAL Murat2ORCID, ÖBEK Erdal3ORCID, ASLAN Ali4ORCID
Affiliation:
1. FIRAT ÜNİVERSİTESİ, MÜHENDİSLİK FAKÜLTESİ, ÇEVRE MÜHENDİSLİĞİ BÖLÜMÜ 2. MUNZUR ÜNİVERSİTESİ 3. FIRAT ÜNİVERSİTESİ 4. VAN YÜZÜNCÜ YIL ÜNİVERSİTESİ
Abstract
Investigation of various species of lichen as biomonitors of air pollutants deposition and evaluation of element pollution were aimed. Maximum accumulation was 43.9±2.1 mg/kg in X. somloensis. Strontium in lichen species was quite high. Percentages of strontium for L.pulmonaria, C.furcata, U.longissima, X.somloensis, and F.caperata were between 58% and 78% indicating the efficient accumulation of strontium. Lichens were also accumulated strategically important elements. Maximum contamination factors in lichens were for strontium and tantalum. Maximum contamination factors of hafnium, niobium, lithium, gallium, and bismuth were for L. pulmonaria while maximum contamination factors of strontium, yttrium, scandium, and cerium were for X.somloensis. Maximum contamination factor of tantalum was for F.caperata. Enrichment factors for L.pulmonaria, C.furcata, and F.caperata were higher than 10, only for bismuth while lower than 10 for U.longissima. Enrichment factors for X.somloensis were higher than 10. Pollution load indexes for L.pulmonaria and U.longissima were higher than 1. Presence of strategically important elements in lichens showed that lichen species can be used as biomonitors of air pollutants.
Publisher
Bitlis Eren Universitesi Fen Bilimleri Dergisi
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes
Reference41 articles.
1. [1] Y. Wang and Zhao, J, “Advances in Energy, Environment and Materials Science: Proceedings of the International Conference on Energy, Environment and Materials Science (EEMS 2015)”, Guanghzou, PR China, August 25–26, 2015, CRC Press. 2. [2] N. Maslamani, S. B. Khan, E. Y. Danish, E. M. Bakhsh, S. M. Zakeeruddin, and A. M. Asiri, “Carboxymethyl cellulose nanocomposite beads as super-efficient catalyst for the reduction of organic and inorganic pollutants”, International Journal of Biological Macromolecules, vol. 167, pp. 101-116, 2021. 3. [3] A. R. Bagheri, N. Aramesh, F. Sher, and M. Bilal, “Covalent organic frameworks as robust materials for mitigation of environmental pollutants”, Chemosphere, vol. 270, 129523, 2021. 4. [4] J. Rockström, W. Steffen, K. Noone, A. Persson, F. S. Chapin III, E. Lambin, and Foley, J, “Planetary boundaries: exploring the safe operating space for humanity”, Ecol. Soc., vol. 14, pp. 32, 2009. 5. [5] E. F. Kean, R. F. Shore, G. Scholey, R. Strachan, and E. A. Chadwick, “Persistent pollutants exceed toxic thresholds in a freshwater top predator decades after legislative control”, Environmental Pollution, vol. 272, 116415, 2021.
|
|