7 research outputs found
Accumulation of cadmium, zinc and copper by Helianthus annuus L.: impact on plant grawth and uptake of nutritional elements
We investigated the effects on physiological response, trace elements and nutrients accumulation
of sunflower plants grown in soil contaminated with: 5 mg kg−1 of Cd; 5 and 300 mg
kg−1 of Cd and Zn, respectively; 5, 300, and 400 mg kg−1 of Cd, Zn, and Cu, respectively.
Contaminants applied did not produce large effects on growth, except in Cd-Zn-Cu treatment
in which leaf area and total dry matter were reduced, by 15%. The contamination with
Cd alone did not affect neither growth nor physiological parameters, despite considerable
amounts of Cd accumulated in roots and older leaves, with a high bioconcentration factor
from soil to plant. By adding Zn and then Cu to Cd in soil, significant were the toxic effects
on chlorophyll content and water relations due to greater accumulation of trace elements in
tissues, with imbalances in nutrients uptake. Highly significant was the interaction between
shoot elements concentration (Cd, Zn, Cu, Fe, Mg, K, Ca) and treatments. Heavy metals
concentrations in roots always exceeded those in stem and leaves, with a lower translocation
from roots to shoots, suggesting a strategy of sunflower to compartmentalise the potentially
toxic elements in physiologically less active parts in order to preserve younger tissues