Plants (Nov 2022)

Phytomanagement of a Lead-Polluted Shooting Range Using an Aromatic Plant Species and Its Effects on the Rhizosphere Bacterial Diversity and Essential Oil Production

  • Anabel Saran,
  • Lucia Fernandez,
  • Cinthia Yanela Latini,
  • Monica Bellozas Reinhard,
  • Marisol Minig,
  • Sofie Thijs,
  • Jaco Vangronsveld,
  • Luciano Jose Merini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants11223024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 22
p. 3024

Abstract

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This field study aimed to assess the baseline conditions of a long-term shooting range in Argentina polluted with 428 mg kg−1 lead (Pb) to evaluate the establishment and development of Helianthus petiolaris plants and address the efficacy of the phytomanagement strategy through: (i) element accumulation in plant tissues; (ii) rhizosphere bacterial diversity changes by Illumina Miseq™, and (iii) floral water and essential oil yield, composition, and element concentration by GC–MS and ICP. After one life cycle growing in the polluted sites, in the roots of Helianthus petiolaris plants, Pb concentration was between 195 and 304 mg kg−1 Pb. Only a limited fraction of the Pb was translocated to the aerial parts. The predominance of the genus Serratia in the rhizosphere of Helianthus petiolaris plants cultivated in the polluted sites and the decrease in the essential oil yield were some effects significantly associated with soil Pb concentration. No detectable Pb concentration was found in the floral water and essential oil obtained. Extractable Pb concentration in the soil reduced between 28% and 45% after the harvest.

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