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Accumulation of As, Ag, Cd, Cu, Pb, and Zn by Native Plants Growing in Soils Contaminated by Mining Environmental Liabilities in the Peruvian Andes

Plants 2021 22 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Edith Cruzado-Tafur, Joanna Szpunar Joanna Szpunar Joanna Szpunar Katarzyna Bierła, Joanna Szpunar Lisard Torró, Joanna Szpunar Joanna Szpunar Joanna Szpunar Joanna Szpunar Joanna Szpunar Joanna Szpunar Joanna Szpunar

Summary

Researchers tested native Andean plants growing in mining-contaminated soils for their ability to absorb heavy metals like lead, arsenic, and copper, finding that different plants accumulate different metals in their roots, stems, and leaves. This phytoremediation research is relevant to understanding how contaminated soils near plastic production and waste sites might be cleaned up.

The capability of native plant species grown in polluted post-mining soils to accumulate metals was evaluated in view of their possible suitability for phytoremediation. The study areas included two environmental liabilities in the Cajamarca region in the Peruvian Andes. The content of As, Ag, Cd, Cu, Pb, and Zn was determined in individual plant organs and correlated with soil characteristics. The degree of the pollution depended on the metal with results ranging from uncontaminated (Cd) to moderately (Zn), strongly (As, Cu), and extremely contaminated (Pb, Ag) soils. The metals were mainly present in the fractions with limited metal mobility. The bioaccumulation of the metals in plants as well the translocation into overground organs was determined. Out of the 21 plants evaluated, <i>Pernettya prostrata</i> and <i>Gaultheria glomerate</i> were suitable for Zn, and <i>Gaultheria glomerata</i> and <i>Festuca</i> sp. for Cd, phytostabilization. The native species applicable for Cd phytoremediation were <i>Ageratina glechonophylla</i>, <i>Bejaria</i> sp., whereas <i>Pernettya prostrata Achyrocline alata,</i><i>Ageratina fastigiate</i>, <i>Baccharis alnifolia</i>, <i>Calceolaria tetragona</i>, <i>Arenaria digyna</i>, <i>Hypericum laricifolium</i>, <i>Brachyotum radula</i>, and <i>Nicotiana thyrsiflora</i> were suitable for both Cd and Zn. None of the studied plants appeared to be suitable for phytoremediation of Pb, Cu, As and Ag.

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