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Hyperaccumulators of metal and metalloid trace elements: Facts and fiction

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Abstract
Plants that accumulate metal and metalloid trace elements to extraordinarily high concentrations in their living biomass have inspired much research worldwide during the last decades. Hyperaccumulators have been recorded and experimentally confirmed for elements such as nickel, zinc, cadmium, manganese, arsenic and selenium. However, to date, hyperaccumulation of lead, copper, cobalt, chromium and thallium remain largely unconfirmed. Recent uses of the term in relation to rare-earth elements require critical evaluation. Since the mid-1970s the term ‘hyperaccumulator’ has been used millions of times by thousands of people, with varying degrees of precision, aptness and understanding that have not always corresponded with the views of the originators of the terminology and of the present authors. There is therefore a need to clarify the circumstances in which the term ‘hyperaccumulator’ is appropriate and to set out the conditions that should be met when the terms are used. We outline here the main considerations for establishing metal or metalloid hyperaccumulation status of plants, (re)define some of the terminology and note potential pitfalls. Unambiguous communication will require the international scientific community to adopt standard terminology and methods for confirming the reliability of analytical data in relation to metal and metalloid hyperaccumulators.

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Effects of lead and cadmium on photosynthesis in Amaranthus spinosus and assessment of phytoremediation potential.

TL;DR: Investigation shows that A. spinosus has good potential for phytoremediation of soils contaminated by low levels of Cd and Pb, and Cd is more bioconcentrated and translocated in comparison to Pb.
Journal ArticleDOI

Soil-to-plant transfer of arsenic and phosphorus along a contamination gradient in the mining-impacted Ogosta River floodplain.

TL;DR: Investigation of the soil-to-shoot transfer of As and phosphorus in wild populations of herbaceous species growing along an As contamination gradient across an extensive pasture in the mining-impacted Ogosta River floodplain found no evidence for interference of As with P uptake by plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Potential of Industrial Hemp for Phytoremediation of Heavy Metals

Dante F. Placido, +1 more
- 23 Feb 2022 - 
TL;DR: The recent availability of an annotated genome sequence provides a powerful tool for the bioengineering of C. sativa for better phytoremediation, where plants are used to capture metals from the environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental geochemistry of the abandoned Mamut Copper Mine (Sabah) Malaysia

TL;DR: A preliminary geochemical investigation of waste rocks, sediments, secondary precipitates, surface water chemistry and foliar elemental uptake in ferns is presented, and these results are discussed in light of their environmental significance for rehabilitation.
References
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Terrestrial higher plants which hyperaccumulate metallic elements. a review of their distribution, ecology and phytochemistry

TL;DR: Phytochemical studies suggest that hyperaccumulation is closely linked to the mechanism of metal tolerance involved in the successful colonization of metalliferous and otherwise phytotoxic soils.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accumulators and excluders ?strategies in the response of plants to heavy metals

TL;DR: In this paper, two basic strategies of plant response are suggested, accumulators and excluders, which do not generally suppress metal uptake but result in internal detoxification, and indicators are seen as a further mode of response where proportional relationships exist between metal levels in the soil, uptake and accumulation in plant parts.
Journal ArticleDOI

A fern that hyperaccumulates arsenic

TL;DR: A hardy, versatile, fast-growing plant that helps to remove arsenic from contaminated soils.
Journal ArticleDOI

Zinc in plants

TL;DR: The dominant fluxes of Zn in the soil-root-shoot continuum are described, including Zn inputs to soils, the plant availability of soluble Zn(2+) at the root surface, and plant uptake and accumulation of ZN.
Book

Phytoremediation of toxic metals : using plants to clean up the environment

TL;DR: Why Use Phytoremediation?
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Hyperaccumulators for copper?

Hyperaccumulation of copper remains largely unconfirmed.