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The Uptake of Rare Trace Elements by Perennial Ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.)

Toxics 2023 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sally Gaw Hayley Jensen, Hayley Jensen, Brett Robinson, Sally Gaw Niklas J. Lehto, Brett Robinson, Peter C. Almond, Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Niklas J. Lehto, Brett Robinson, Brett Robinson, Sally Gaw Brett Robinson, Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Brett Robinson, Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw

Summary

This paper is not about microplastics — it studies how a common pasture grass (ryegrass) takes up rare trace elements like lanthanum, beryllium, and indium from spiked soils, assessing the risk of these technology-critical metals entering the food chain through grazing animals.

Technological development has increased the use of chemical elements that have hitherto received scant scientific attention as environmental contaminants. Successful management of these rare trace elements (RTEs) requires elucidation of their mobility in the soil-plant system. We aimed to determine the capacity of <i>Lolium perenne</i> (a common pasture species) to tolerate and accumulate the RTEs Be, Ga, In, La, Ce, Nd, and Gd in a fluvial recent soil. Cadmium was used as a reference as a well-studied contaminant that is relatively mobile in the soil-plant system. Soil was spiked with 2.5-283 mg kg<sup>-1</sup> of RTE or Cd salts, representing five, 10, 20, and 40 times their background concentrations in soil. For Be, Ce, In, and La, there was no growth reduction, even at the highest soil concentrations (76, 1132, 10.2, and 874 mg kg<sup>-1</sup>, respectively), which resulted in foliar concentrations of 7.1, 12, 0.11, and 50 mg kg<sup>-1</sup>, respectively. The maximum no-biomass reduction foliar concentrations for Cd, Gd, Nd, and Ga were 0.061, 0.1, 7.1, and 11 mg kg<sup>-1</sup>, respectively. Bioaccumulation coefficients ranged from 0.0030-0.95, and increased Ce < In < Nd ≅ Gd < La ≅ Be ≅ Ga < Cd. Beryllium and La were the RTEs most at risk of entering the food chain via <i>L. perenne</i>, as their toxicity thresholds were not reached in the ranges tested, and the bioaccumulation coefficient (plant/soil concentration quotient) trends indicated that uptake would continue to increase at higher soil concentrations. In contrast, In and Ce were the elements least likely to enter the food chain. Further research should repeat the experiments in different soil types or with different plant species to test the robustness of the findings.

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