Toxicity and removal of heavy metals (cadmium, copper, and zinc) by Lemna gibba
Effects of cadmium, copper, and zinc on the aquatic plant Lemna gibba were determined under controlled conditions; in parallel their removal from the growth medium was followed. The results showed that the three heavy metals affected growth, a physiological stress index defined as the ratio of Chlor...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecotoxicology and environmental safety 2009-09, Vol.72 (6), p.1774-1780 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Effects of cadmium, copper, and zinc on the aquatic plant
Lemna gibba were determined under controlled conditions; in parallel their removal from the growth medium was followed. The results showed that the three heavy metals affected growth, a physiological stress index defined as the ratio of Chlorophyll to phaeophytin (D665/D665a), and the contents of proline. After 4 days, 10
−3–10
−1
mg/L Cd inhibited growth by 25–100%, reduced D665/D665a by 35–89%, and increased proline content by 44–567%. Under the same conditions, 10
−4–10
−1
μg/L Cu inhibited growth by 36–75%, reduced D665/D665a by 19–81%, and increased proline content by 67–288%. Comparable concentrations of Zn had little effect. However, higher concentrations (4, 30, and 50
mg/L) inhibited growth by 50–79%. Also, 0.1 and 30
mg/L induced a small reduction of D665/D665a (−3.8% and −22%) and an increase in proline contents (+144% and +177%). When it was observed, proline accumulation was always transient and the maximum was reached after 4 days. Monitoring metal concentration in the medium showed that
L. gibba was able to remove metals from the medium. Zn and Cu removal was biphasic, it was rapid during the first 2 days (> 60% reduction) and slow (10–20%) during the following 8 days. For Cd, removal was linear and depended on the initial concentration. It reached approximately 90% after 6 or 8 days for initial concentrations of 10
−1 and 10
−3
mg/L, respectively. |
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ISSN: | 0147-6513 1090-2414 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2009.05.004 |