Plants (Aug 2023)

Laser-Induced Fluorescence for Monitoring Environmental Contamination and Stress in the Moss <i>Thuidium plicatile</i>

  • Kelly Truax,
  • Henrietta Dulai,
  • Anupam Misra,
  • Wendy Kuhne,
  • Peter Fuleky,
  • Celia Smith,
  • Milton Garces

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants12173124
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 17
p. 3124

Abstract

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The ability to detect, measure, and locate the source of contaminants, especially heavy metals and radionuclides, is of ongoing interest. A common tool for contaminant identification and bioremediation is vegetation that can accumulate and indicate recent and historic pollution. However, large-scale sampling can be costly and labor-intensive. Hence, non-invasive in-situ techniques such as laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) are becoming useful and effective ways to observe the health of plants through the excitation of organic molecules, e.g., chlorophyll. The technique presented utilizes images collected of LIF in moss to identify different metals and environmental stressors. Analysis through image processing of LIF response was key to identifying Cu, Zn, Pb, and a mixture of the metals at nmol/cm2 levels. Specifically, the RGB values from each image were used to create density histograms of each color channel’s relative pixel abundance at each decimal code value. These histograms were then used to compare color shifts linked to the successful identification of contaminated moss samples. Photoperiod and extraneous environmental stressors had minimal impact on the histogram color shift compared to metals and presented with a response that differentiated them from metal contamination.

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