2016
DOI: 10.1080/15226514.2016.1207610
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Tolerance and hyperaccumulation of a mixture of heavy metals (Cu, Pb, Hg, and Zn) by four aquatic macrophytes

Abstract: In the present investigation, four macrophytes, namely Typha latifolia (L.), Lemna minor (L.), Eichhornia crassipes (Mart.) Solms-Laubach, and Myriophyllum aquaticum (Vell.) Verdc, were evaluated for their heavy metal (Cu, Pb, Hg, and Zn) hyperaccumulation potential under laboratory conditions. Tolerance analyses were performed for 7 days of exposure at five different treatments of the metals mixture (Cu, Hg, Pb, and Zn). The production of chlorophyll and carotenoids was determined at the end of each treatment… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…This is due to the ability of plants to uptake essential elements compared to non-essential elements also plants may develop tolerance strategies that reduce their uptake and accumulation (Saha et al, 2015;Sarathambal et al, 2017;Sung, Lee and Munster, 2015). Plants which are possessing < 1 for TF and BCF values are considered to be unsuitable for phytoextraction process (Romanova, Shuvaeva and Belchenko, 2016;Romero-Hernández et al, 2017). Results indicate that the root parts of the plant possess high concentration of metal ions which indicates a higher accumulation of ions to protect photosynthetic tissue in the above ground parts (Saha, Banerjee and Sarkar, 2015;Salama, Al Watban and Al-Fughom, 2011).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is due to the ability of plants to uptake essential elements compared to non-essential elements also plants may develop tolerance strategies that reduce their uptake and accumulation (Saha et al, 2015;Sarathambal et al, 2017;Sung, Lee and Munster, 2015). Plants which are possessing < 1 for TF and BCF values are considered to be unsuitable for phytoextraction process (Romanova, Shuvaeva and Belchenko, 2016;Romero-Hernández et al, 2017). Results indicate that the root parts of the plant possess high concentration of metal ions which indicates a higher accumulation of ions to protect photosynthetic tissue in the above ground parts (Saha, Banerjee and Sarkar, 2015;Salama, Al Watban and Al-Fughom, 2011).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The phytoremediation system lasted 7 days. During the treatment of phytoremediation, the levels of concentration of heavy metals in solution were determined [30] and the translocation factor, bioaccumulation factor [34][35][36], and removal kinetics were calculated.…”
Section: Phytoremediationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Metal uptake (MU), translocation/transfer factor (TF), bioconcentration factor (BCF), Percent metal uptake (% MU), Removal capacity (RC) and Toxicity index (TI). These models are repeatedly used in aquatic phytoremediation studies of metals in aqueous medium [48,156,177,175,176,141,155,44,143,165,158,146,137,166,167,168,171,172,148,139,150,173,210,211] and can also be used in organic pollutant remediation studies.…”
Section: Chemometrics For Aquatic Phytoremediationmentioning
confidence: 99%