Soil & Environmental Health (May 2024)

Metal and nutrient uptake by natural wetland plants in a tropical man-made wetland of Sri Lanka

  • M.D.D. Rodrigo,
  • N.S. Abeysingha,
  • D.M.S. Duminda,
  • Ram L. Ray

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 2
p. 100080

Abstract

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Phytoremediation of contaminated soil is an environmentally-friendly approach to minimize the impacts of nutrients and heavy metals on an ecosystem. Hence, selecting appropriate plants with phytoextraction potential is paramount to remediatie contaminated soils. This study aimed to investigate the nutrient and metal contents of four natural aquatic plants, including Cyperus rotundus, Eleocharis dulcis, Typha angustifolia, and Schoenoplectus grossus. They were grown in the meadow of a small reservoir in Sri Lanka to assess their phytoextraction ability using plant and soil samples collected at 32 sampling points in the meadow. Their biological concentration (roots/soil), accumulation (shoots/soil), and translocation (shoots/roots) factors were determined to assess element mobility and phytoextraction ability. Total K, Na, Mg, Ca, Zn, Cu, Fe, Mn, As, Pb, and Cd contents of plants and soil samples were measured using an Inductivity Couple Plasma Optical Emission Spectrophotometer. ANCOVA was used as a statistical test to assess the best plant type in terms of nutrient and metal absorption. Plant shoots exhibited significantly greater values for P, Na, Mg, Zn, Cd, and Fe than their roots. Their biological concentration, accumulation and translocation factors were not different among the four plant species. However, these values were >1 for all the species, indicating their potential to be used as hyperaccumulators. T. angustifolia, with its high potential for nutrient and metal accumulation and the highest aesthetic appeal, was selected as the best overall wetland species for phytoremediation purposes.

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