Levels of heavy metals in wetland and marine vascular plants and their biomonitoring potential: A comparative assessment
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2017
abstract:
The present study investigated the levels of As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Mn, Ni, Pb and Zn in the seagrasses Posidonia
oceanica and Cymodocea nodosa, and in the wetland macrophytes Phragmites australis, Arundo donax, Typha
domingensis, Apium nodiflorum, and Nasturtium officinale. Results showed that the bioaccumulation capacity
fromsediments, translocation, total levels in plant tissues, and bioindication of metals in sediments, are generally
species-specific. In particular, the patterns of metals in the aquatic plants studied were overall independent of
ecology (coasts vs wetlands), biomass, anatomy (rhizomatous vs non rhizomatous plants), and life form
(hemicrytophytes vs hydrophytes). However, marine phanerogams and wetland macrophytes shared some
characteristics such as high levels of heavy metals in their below-ground organs, similar capacity of element
translocation in the rhizosphere, compartmentalization of metals in the different plant organs, and potential as
bioindicators of Cu, Mn and Zn levels in the substratum. In particular, the present findings indicate that, despite
ecological and morphological similarities, different plant species tend to respond differently to exposure to heavy
metals. Furthermore, this seems to result from the species individual ability to accumulate and detoxify the various
metals rather than being attributed to differences in their ecological and morpho-anatomical characteristics.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Seagrasses; Macrophytes; Heavy metal; Bioindicator; Sediments; Mediterranean
List of contributors:
DI MARTINO, Vincenzo
Published in: