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Trace metal uptake and accumulation in trees as affected by environmental pollution

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TLDR
In this article, changes in tree-ring chemistry of conifers show that increased tissue concentrations of some metals are quite similar to temporal increases in local and regional fossil fuel combustion, suggesting a relationship between the two Highest metal concentrations in tree rings were found near a power plant and at high-elevation sites remote from point sources Levels of many trace metals, particularly Al, Fe, and Mn, in tree phloem tissues are at or exceed levels reported as toxic thresholds in other plant species.
Abstract
Regional-scale increases in combustion of fossil fuels, trace metal deposition profiles in lake sediments, and metal accumulation patterns in forest soils suggest that forests have been exposed to increasing levels of trace metals in recent decades Such increases are of concern because metals such as Al, Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni and Zn typically have long residence times in soil-plant systems and can adversely affect plant physiological and litter decomposition processes at sufficiently high concentrations Chronic effects of these metals at present regional concentrations are largely unknown, and their increased availability to trees can occur through multiple pathways, most of which are poorly characterized Our surveys of changes in tree-ring chemistry of conifers show that increased tissue concentrations of some metals are quite similar to temporal increases in local and regional fossil fuel combustion, suggesting a relationship between the two Highest metal concentrations in tree rings were found near a power plant and at high-elevation sites remote from point sources Levels of many trace metals, particularly Al, Fe, and Mn, in tree phloem tissues are at or exceed levels reported as toxic thresholds in other plant species In reviewing the literature, it is clear that toxic thresholds are strongly influenced by soil characteristics, plant species, and plant part Thus, until more information is obtained on toxic thresholds for individual and combined levels of trace metals on plant physiological and forest ecosystem-level processes, their role, if any, in forest declines must be considered conjectural

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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of heavy metal contamination on macronutrient availability and acidification parameters in forest soil in the vicinity of the Harjavalta Cu-Ni smelter, SW Finland.

TL;DR: No signs of soil acidification were found in the topmost layers of the soil measured as a change in pH, exchangeable acidity and Al, and the determination of CEC by the summation method in heavy-metal polluted forest soils is not recommended unless heavy metal cations are also included in the calculations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment of airborne heavy metal pollution by aboveground plant parts.

TL;DR: In pine samples from the polluted sites the ratio of concentrations between bark and wood was high for Al, Ba, Cu and Fe, whereas no differences were found in samples from a unpolluted area and in the oleander species the ratio between leaves and wood concentration allowed to distinguish between control and polluted sites.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acidification, metals and macrophytes.

TL;DR: Ranges of plant metal concentration, toxic thresholds and effects, and effects of metal on biomass are derived from the literature, and relationships of metal in plants to metals in sediment, soil water and air are discussed.
Journal Article

Environmental hazards of aluminum to plants, invertebrates, fish, and wildlife

TL;DR: Aluminum (Al) is the third most common mineral and the most common metal in Earth's crust, accounting for approximately 8.1% of the crust by weight as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of tree rings using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry to record fluctuations in a metal pollution episode.

TL;DR: Analysis of Acer pseudoplatanus L. (sycamore) tree rings using ICP-MS was used to assess the impact of metal deposition on trees growing in the vicinity of a metal refinery at Prescot, north-west England compared to a reference site at Croxteth 6 km distant, suggesting changes in element concentrations are a result of reduced metal deposition combined with increased soil acidity due to reduced buffering capacity of metal ions in rainfall.
References
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Book

Environmental chemistry of the elements

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a method to solve the problem of how to find the shortest path between two points of interest in a set of images. Index Reference Record created on 2004-09-07, modified on 2016-08-08
Journal ArticleDOI

The Physiology of Metal Toxicity in Plants

TL;DR: Aluminum toxicity is discussed in this paper, including general effects (symptoms and physiological effects), differential aluminum tolerance in plants, beneficial effects of aluminum, and the genetic control of aluminum tolerance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aluminum Leaching Response to Acid Precipitation: Effects on High-Elevation Watersheds in the Northeast

TL;DR: Combined results from areas of silicate bedrock in the United States and Europe suggest that aluminum represents an important biogeochemical linkage between terrestrial and aquatic environments exposed to acid precipitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical Changes Due To Acid Precipitation In A Loess-Derived Soil In Central Europe

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of acid precipitation on chemical soil state and ion fluxes in the ecosystem between 1966 and 1979 was investigated in a stand of Fagus silvatica in the Solling highlands, Germany.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Plant Root and Its Environment.

D. C. Malcolm, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1975 - 
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