Weed Species from Tea Gardens as a Source of Novel Aluminum Hyperaccumulators

Author:

Hajiboland Roghieh1,Moradi Aiuob2,Kahneh Ehsan3ORCID,Poschenrieder Charlotte4ORCID,Nazari Fatemeh1,Pavlovic Jelena5ORCID,Tolra Roser4ORCID,Salehi-Lisar Seyed-Yahya1,Nikolic Miroslav5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant, Cell and Molecular Biology, University of Tabriz, Tabriz 51666-16471, Iran

2. Watershed Management and Forests and Rangelands Research Department, Guilan Agricultural and Natural Resources Research and Education Center, Agricultural Research, Education and Extension Organization (AREEO), Rasht 41635-3394, Iran

3. Tea Research Center, Iran Horticultural Science Research Institute, Agricultural Research, Education and Extension Organization (AREEO), Lahijan 44159-77788, Iran

4. Plant Physiology Laboratory, Bioscience Faculty, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Spain

5. Institute for Multidisciplinary Research, University of Belgrade, Kneza Viseslava 1, 11030 Belgrade, Serbia

Abstract

Increased availability of toxic Al3+ is the main constraint limiting plant growth on acid soils. Plants adapted to acid soils, however, tolerate toxic Al3+, and some can accumulate Al in their aerial parts to a significant degree. Studies on Al-tolerant and Al-accumulating species have mainly focused on the vegetation of acid soils distributed as two global belts in the northern and southern hemispheres, while acid soils formed outside these regions have been largely neglected. The acid soils (pH 3.4–4.2) of the tea plantations in the south Caspian region of Northern Iran were surveyed over three seasons at two main locations. Aluminum and other mineral elements (including nutrients) were measured in 499 plant specimens representing 86 species from 43 families. Al accumulation exceeding the criterion for accumulator species (>1000 µg g−1 DW) was found in 36 species belonging to 23 families of herbaceous annual or perennial angiosperms, in addition to three bryophyte species. Besides Al, Fe accumulation (1026–5155 µg g−1 DW) was also observed in the accumulator species that exceeded the critical toxicity concentration, whereas no such accumulation was observed for Mn. The majority of analyzed accumulator plants (64%) were cosmopolitan or pluriregional species, with a considerable rate of Euro-Siberian elements (37%). Our findings, which may contribute to phylogenetic studies of Al accumulators, also suggest suitable accumulator and excluder species for the rehabilitation of acid-eroded soils and introduce new model species for investigating Al accumulation and exclusion mechanisms.

Funder

University of Tabriz

Serbian Ministry of Science, Technological Development and Innovation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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