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Journal ArticleDOI

Phytoextraction: The Use of Plants To Remove Heavy Metals from Soils

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TLDR
The high metal accumulation by some cultivars of B. juncea suggests that these plants may be used to clean up toxic metal-contaminated sites in a process termed phytoextraction.
Abstract
A small number of wild plants which grow on metal contaminated soil accumulate large amounts of heavy metals in their roots and shoots This property may be exploited for soil reclamation if an easily cultivated, high biomass crop plant able to accumulate heavy metals is identified Therefore, the ability of various crop plants to accumulate Pb in shoots and roots was compared While all crop Brassicas tested accumulated Pb, some cultivars of Brassica juncea (L) Czern showed a strong ability to accumulate Pb in roots and to transport Pb to the shoots (1083 mg Pb/g DW in the roots and 345 mg Pb/g DW in the shoots) B juncea was also able to concentrate Cr{sup -6}, Cd, Ni, Zn, and Cu in the shoots 58, 52, 31, 17, and 7 fold, respectively, from a substrate containing sulfates and phosphates as fertilizers The high metal accumulation by some cultivars of B juncea suggests that these plants may be used to clean up toxic metal-contaminated sites in a process termed phytoextraction

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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of the element composition in several plant species and their substrate from a 1 500 000-km2 area in Northern Europe

TL;DR: Airborne organic material attached to the leaves can result in high values of these elements without any pollution source and can be used as an indicator of minerogenic dust.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anatomical changes due to uptake and accumulation of Zn and Cd in Indian mustard (Brassica juncea)

TL;DR: Physiological and morphological changes of Zn-treated plants included a significant decrease in relative water content, dry weight and plant height, while Cd at higher concentrations resulted in structural changes only in stems and roots, and higher Zn (ZnT3 and ZnT4), Cd (CdT4) and Cd
Journal ArticleDOI

Uptake and localisation of lead in the root system of Brassica juncea.

TL;DR: The uptake and distribution of Pb sequestered by hydroponically grown Brassica juncea was investigated and lead uptake was restricted largely to root tissue, suggesting a membrane transport protein may be involved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of phytoextracting cadmium and lead by sunflower, ricinus, alfalfa and mustard in hydroponic culture

TL;DR: Values of BCF and TF indicated that four species had dissimilar abilities of phytoextraction and transportation of heavy metals, and measurements should be taken to improve the phytoremediation of sites contaminated with heavy metals.
Book ChapterDOI

Heavy Metal Toxicity in Plants

TL;DR: In this paper, the toxic effects of heavy metals on plant growth and their detoxification mechanisms that enable them to tolerate high levels of metals in the soil environment are discussed, and specific mechanisms by which toxic elements are excluded, retained at root level, or transformed into physiologically tolerant forms.
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