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1.
Heavy metal–resistant bacterial strains were isolated from heavy metal–contaminated soils and identified as Bacillus sp. and Leclercia adecarboxylata on the basis of their morphology and biochemical characters using the VITEK 2 Systems Version 05.02. The heavy metal and antibiotic resistance of the isolates were studied. A green house pot experiment was conducted to examine the bacterial ability to extract the lead in soils and for their effect on lead uptake by Ricinus communis in an artificially contaminated soil. Bacterial inoculated pots increased the biomass of the R. communis compared to the uninoculated control, and the root growth of the plant was also increased in the inoculated pot. The experimental data confirmed that lead‐resistant bacteria have a pronounced effect on heavy metal uptake in plants, which may provide a new bacterially assisted phytoremediation of metal‐contaminated soils. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are microscopic fungi that occur naturally in soil and form a symbiosis with plant roots. By colonizing the roots, the fungus increases plant growth by making soil essential elements like zinc and phosphorus more accessible. AMF can play a role in the phytoremediation of heavy metal–contaminated soil (mycorrhizoremediation). Two research experiments were conducted to evaluate the impact of AMF on the extraction of different heavy metals (arsenic, cadmium, lead, selenium, and zinc) in contaminated soil. A grass mixture composed of Festuca rubra, Festuca eliator, Agropyron repens, and Trifolium repens was used in the experiments, and four different types of AMF were investigated: Glomus intraradices, Glomus mosseae, Glomus etunicatum, and Gigaspora gigantea. The results of the study showed that heavy metal extraction by Glomus intraradices colonized plants was the highest of all four AMF tested and was generally higher than nonmycorrhizal plants, depending on the heavy metal concentration in soil and whether it interacted with other metals in soil. However, metal extraction by AMF colonized grasses reached a plateau after an approximately two‐month period showing no further phytoaccumulation. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
Chelate‐assisted metal uptake by plants has only recently been discovered in the remediation industry. The simultaneous accumulation of lead, arsenic, copper, and cadmium in plants after application of chelating agents to soil is a promising technology enhancement for phytoremediation. One of the most powerful and commonly used chelating agents is ethylene diamine tetra acetic acid (EDTA), which forms complexes with many of the metal contaminants within the natural environment. This study was conducted to determine the efficiency of an emergent wetland plant species Typha sp. and floating wetland macrophytes such as Pistia sp., Azolla sp., Lemna sp., Salvinia sp., and Eichhornia sp. in phytoremediation of various heavy metals with addition of a chelating agent such as EDTA. EDTA addition to the treatment systems increased the uptake of heavy metals by plants, which was much pronounced with lead and copper. However, the pattern of uptake by plants was similar as that of heavy metals without EDTA amendments. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
A pilot phytoremediation project was conducted at the Mukluk site in Sprague, Connecticut, formerly a private skeet shooting range. A series of experiments was conducted to investigate if any plants can be effective lead phytoextractors for this site that has very high soil lead concentrations and low soil pH. Greenhouse screening of plants for lead resistance and accumulation using field soil was implemented as the initial step before the field installation. Herbaceous plant species with known lead phytoextraction capabilities included Indian mustard and blue fescue; a few willow clones with purported heavy metal resistance were also tested. Based on the results of the greenhouse experiments, blue fescue appeared to be sensitive to high lead concentration in soil, and only willows and Indian mustard along with various soil amendments were selected for the field installation. Indian mustard grew poorly in most of the treatments at the site except in the compost and lime treatment. Lead accumulation by this species was low in all treatments. In contrast, willows showed tolerance to very high lead concentrations present in the soil and were able to uptake and translocate lead into aboveground tissues. However, lead content in aerial tissues was low, and no change in soil lead concentration at the site was recorded post‐harvest after one growing season. It appeared that highly unfavorable soil characteristics at the Mukluk site complicated the species selection, and no effective phytoextractors have been found for this location. These suggest that the feasibility of phytostabilization and possible production of biofuel from willow biomass on these types of sites should be further investigated. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Phytoremediation is a new technology that uses specially selected metal-accumulating plants as an attractive and economical method to clean up soils contaminated with heavy metals and radionuclides. The integration of specially selected metal-accumulating crop plants (Brassica juncea (L) Czern.) with innovative soil amendments allows plants to achieve high biomass and metal accumulation rates. In a recent study conducted at a lead-contaminated site in Trenton, New Jersey, the soil was treated with phytoremediation using successive crops of B. juncea combined with soil amendments. Through phytoremediation, the average surface soil lead concentration was reduced by 13 percent. In addition, the target soil concentration of 400 mg/kg was achieved in approximately 72 percent of the treated area in one cropping season.  相似文献   

6.
Heavy metal contamination of soil resulting from anthropogenic sources poses a significant challenge in many industrialized societies. The current technologies employed for removal of heavy metals often involve expensive ex-situ processes requiring sophisticated equipment and removal, transportation, and purification of the soil. Generally, in-situ remedial technologies are favored to ex-situ methods for detoxification, neutralization, degradation, or immobilization of contaminants. In-situ bioremediation is increasingly favored because of its effectiveness and low cost. A new type of bioremediation, known as vegetative remediation or “phytoremediation,” uses metal-tolerant hyperaccumulator plants to take up metal ions from soils and store them in their aboveground parts. To select the appropriate phytoremediation technology, one must understand the technical feasibility, cost effectiveness, and availability of the suitable plant species. Equally important is determining whether the site's soil conditions are optimal to enhance or restore the soil biological activity. Before phytoremediation can be exploited on a contaminated site, greenhouse-scale confirmatory testing is necessary to measure plant uptake and correlate shoot metal concentrations to available soil metals. These tests also validate that the harvesting and subsequent disposal of metal-containing plant tissues are environmentally safe and manageable.  相似文献   

7.
Elevated levels of arsenic can pose a major threat to both human health and the environment. The phytoremediation of heavy metals from soil is emerging as a cost‐effective technology for the remediation of contaminated soils. The present greenhouse study was undertaken to identify plants capable of tolerating and accumulating high concentrations of arsenic. Asparagus fern and rye grass were found to tolerate and accumulate more than 1,100 ppm of arsenic in plant tissue. Arsenic uptake as affected by different levels of the chelating agent trans‐1, 2‐ cyclohexylenedinitrilotetraacetic acid (CDTA) and soil pH were also studied. The application of 5 mmol kg?1 of CDTA to arsenic‐contaminated medium loam field soil enhanced the accumulation of arsenic by the test plants. Under these conditions, plants accumulated up to 1,400 ppm of arsenic as compared to 950 ppm by the plants grown in soil containing 1,200 ppm of arsenic but without any amendment of the chelating agent. Plants grown in field soil of pH 5 containing 300 ppm of arsenic absorbed higher concentrations of arsenic than at other tested pH levels. Corresponding reductions in arsenic content of soil after plant harvests were observed. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
This study evaluated pilot‐scale active caps composed of apatite, organoclay, biopolymers, and sand for the remediation of metal‐contaminated sediments. The active caps were constructed in Steel Creek, at the Savannah River Site near Aiken, South Carolina. Monitoring was conducted for 12 months. Effectiveness of the caps was based on an evaluation of contaminant bioavailability, resistance to erosion, and impacts on benthic organisms. Active caps lowered metal bioavailability in the sediment during the one‐year test period. Biopolymers reduced sediment suspension during cap construction, increased the pool of carbon, and lowered the release of metals. This field validation showed that active caps can effectively treat contaminants by changing their speciation, and that caps can be constructed to include more than one type of amendment to achieve multiple goals. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
The present work undertaken in the environmental context aims to study the distribution of heavy metals in plants that grow naturally around uncontrolled landfills. The study's goal was to identify plants that can be used to remediate contaminated soils. For this purpose, 14 plants species and their rhizospheric soil samples were collected and analyzed for arsenic, cadmium, cobalt, chromium, copper, lead, nickel, and zinc by inductively coupled plasma‐atomic emission spectrometry. The results showed the presence of elevated metal concentrations in soil, many exceeding the regulatory values, and that many species exhibited an ability to accumulate multiple metals in their shoots and roots without sustaining toxicity. This was confirmed by bioconcentration and translocation factors generally higher than 1.  相似文献   

10.
Phytoremediation is an emerging remediation technology that utilizes plants and microbes to clean up contaminated air, soil, and water. Tropical and subtropical environments have an advantage in that long plant‐growing seasons and increased soil temperature can accelerate phytoremediation processes. Various contaminated sites in Hawaii have been addressed using this technology. In this article, work progress and advances of phytoremediation are briefly reviewed and exemplified with seven chemically contaminated sites in Hawaii. The investigations were performed for one or more of the following remediation needs: explosive residues, hydrocarbons, pesticide residues, soil stabilization, and slaughterhouse wastewater. In this unique article, studies of testing of over 100 plant species for remediation are reviewed and documented. The general trend leads one to consider that salt‐ and/or drought‐tolerant plants can bear other potential stress‐inducing conditions. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Over the past few years, there has been a greater study and understanding of the application of phytoremediation to remediate contaminated soil. The enhancement of phytoaccumulation of heavy metals—zinc (Zn), cadmium (Cd), arsenic (As), and selenium (Se)—in plants has been shown by inoculation of roots using arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). This article presents the results of in vitro lab experiments conducted to verify the effects of AMF ( Glomus intraradices) hyphae on speciation of essential Zn and nonessential Cd heavy metals in order to change these metals from a water‐ insoluble carbonate to a soluble and phytoavailable form. Results show that in the presence of heavy metals in a nonavailable form to plants, endomycorrhizal hyphae can change the metal from carbonate to a water‐ soluble species. This phenomenon is more apparent with a nonessential (Cd) than with an essential metal (Zn). Zn saturation is reached in the G. intraradices colonized roots at around 400 ppm, independently of initial ZnCO3 concentrations. Cd saturation is not reached; in the lower Cd treatment, the plant/media metal ratio is 3:1, and in the higher treatment, the ratio is 1:1. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
An experiment was performed to examine the phytoremediation potential of Rhodes grass (Chloris gayana Kunth cv. ‘Pioneer’). The study sought to determine substrate tolerance, biomass production, and plant uptake of antimony (Sb), arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), silver (Ag), and zinc (Zn). The plants were grown on weight percent mixtures (5 percent, 15 percent, 25 percent, 35 percent, 50 percent) of a vertisol soil and base‐metal mine tailings (7–2,040 μg/g As, ≥ 30 μg/g Cd, 30–12,000 μg/g Pb, and 72–4,120 μg/g Zn). The 5 percent and 15 percent amendment of mine tailings increased the biomass production of Rhodes grass (from 0.1 g/plant to ≈ 3.5 g/plant) without appreciably elevating plant concentrations of the elements. Plant growth decreased by greater than 50 percent for the substrate containing greater than 25 percent tailings (3,023 μg/g Pb and 1,084 μg/g Zn). Reduced biomass production coincided with maximal Zn uptake by Rhodes grass (249.8 μg/g), indicating tailings induced phytotoxicity. The total concentrations of metals and metalloids tolerated by Rhodes grass in the plant‐growth medium indicated hypertolerance to elevated As, Pb, and Zn concentrations. Partial extraction of the plant‐growth medium determined that plant‐available Pb was ten times higher than Ag, As, Cd, and Zn availability. However, Rhodes grass accumulated low levels of Pb, in addition to As and Cd, over the experimental range, indicating low fodder toxicity risk to browsing livestock. This study concludes that if there are no invasive species issues associated with conservation land uses, Rhodes grass is well suited to metalliferous mined land revegetation and would therefore be highly effective for such programs in subtropical and tropical Australia. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
With the emergence of risk‐based corrective action decisions, there is interest in the use of more natural techniques that may be as protective as the traditional removal, landfill, or capping approaches for impoundment closure. The use of phytoremediation is one of the more promising techniques. This article presents the results of a three‐year field‐pilot phytoremediation study that involved the use of plants to enhance sludge dewatering at an inactive natural gas‐cracking wastewater lagoon. The dewatering was accompanied by contaminant reduction of benzene, toluene, xylene (BTX), and naphthalene concentrations to below the cleanup goals. Meanwhile, the concentration reductions of three or more ring polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) varied between 30 percent and 60 percent, except for dibenz[a,h]anthracene. The residual PAHs in the sludge are not leaching. Parallel laboratory studies suggest a reduced PAH availability and mobility in the unsaturated zone sludge. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
COGNIS TERRAMET® soil leaching and Bescorp soil washing systems have been successfully combined to remediate an ammunition test burn area at the Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant (TCAAP), New Brighton, Minnesota. This cleanup is the first in the country to successfully combine these two technologies, and it offers a permanent solution to heavy metal remediation. Over 20,000 tons of soil were treated in the project. The cleaned soil remained on-site, and the heavy metal contaminants were removed, recovered, and recycled. Eight heavy metals were removed from the contaminated soil achieving the very stringent cleanup criteria of <175 ppm for residual lead and achieving background concentrations for seven other project metals (antimony, cadmium, chromium, copper, mercury, nickel, and silver). Initial contaminant levels were measured as high as 86,000 ppm lead and 100,000 ppm copper, with average concentrations over 1,600 ppm each. In addition, both live and spent ordnance were removed in the soil treatment plant to meet the cleanup criteria. By combining soil washing and leaching, COGNIS and Bescorp were able to assemble a process which effectively treats all the soil fractions so that all soil material can be returned on-site, no wastewater is generated, and the heavy metals are recovered and recycled. No hazardous waste requiring landfill disposal was generated during the entire remedial operation.  相似文献   

15.
Plant transpiration is a critical process that affects the water balance in phytoremediation plots. The desired effect is to remove contaminated water from the soils through the plant metabolism. Thus, the transpiration rate can be a major component in modeling the groundwater flow and solute transport for a phytoremediation project and ultimately can determine the time expected to achieve remedial goals. Two phytoremediation plots of black willows (Salix nigra) were planted during October 1996 over separate,shallow groundwater plumes at a site in southeastern Louisiana. Concentrations of less than 10 mg/l of the herbicide bentazon were present in the shallow groundwater. Field experiments were developed and performed during the 1998 and 1999 growing seasons to measure sap flow as an indicator of plant transpiration. The tree‐trunk heat balance method was used to measure sap flow. Sap flow was indexed to the cross‐sectional area of the stem, and the sum of the available stem area for each plot was used to calculate the monthly water use in each plot. Daily water use in the plots averaged between 6 to 13 l/day/m2 during the periods tested in 1998 and 1999. By applying growth‐rate observations with the daily water use, annual water use at tree plot maturity was estimated to be 3.6×106 l/year in Plot 1 and 11.39×106 l/year in Plot 2. Application of these data will allow groundwater modeling to be performed to measure the effectiveness of phytoremediation and to predict closure of remediation at the test site. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency/Environmental Response Team (EPA/ERT) has been supporting and implementing the use of phytoremediation to remediate dissolved phase organic compounds at Superfund sites since March 1996. Since then, ERT has applied phytoremediation field plots, both pilot and full scale, to a variety of field conditions. These active sites vary considerably as to depth to groundwater, groundwater transmissivity, contaminant concentrations, contaminant hydrophobicity, climate, planting design, plant selection, planting technique, and type of monitoring. Here we compare the literature and discuss lessons learned at five Superfund sites. Current maintenance and monitoring techniques at these sites are also discussed with recommendations for the maintenance and monitoring of similar sites in the future. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
In situ chemical fixation represents a promising and potentially cost‐effective treatment alternative for metal‐contaminated soils. This article presents the findings of the use of iron‐bearing soil amendments to reduce the leachability and bioaccessibility of arsenic in soils impacted by stack fallout from a zinc smelter. The focus of this investigation was to reduce the lead bioaccessibility of the soils through addition with phosphorus‐bearing amendments. However, as phosphorus addition was expected to increase arsenic mobility, the fixation strategy also incorporated use of iron‐bearing amendments to offset or reverse these effects. The findings of this investigation demonstrated that inclusion of iron‐bearing chemicals in the amendment formulation reduced arsenic leachability and bioaccessibility without compromising amendment effectiveness for reducing lead bioaccessibility. These results suggest that in situ chemical fixation has the potential to be an effective strategy for treatment of the impacted soils. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) evaluated an in‐situ application of a soil‐amendment process at a residential site that was contaminated with lead. The goal of the evaluation was to determine if the soil‐amendment process resulted in lower concentrations of bioavailable lead in the contaminated soils. The relative bioavailability of lead (bioaccessible lead) was measured by an in vitro test procedure that uses a highly acidic extraction procedure to simulate human digestive processes. The soil‐amendment demonstration showed that the 11.2 percent mean reduction in bioavailable lead concentration between untreated and treated soils was not statistically different. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
Forage crop species representing two biologically distinct families (legumes and grasses) were evaluated on soil spiked with 100 mg/kg of pyrene to determine the potential effectiveness of the rhizospheres of these plants for phytoremediation. In this experiment, pyrene dissipation could not be attributed to the presence of plants. Pyrene dissipation was also not related to rhizosphere biological activity, such as microbial counts and enzyme activity. Planting with reed canarygrass and switchgrass significantly increased the microbial counts in soil; however, the differences in the microbial counts were not correlated to the levels of pyrene dissipation. Reed canarygrass rhizosphere had significantly higher dehydrogenase activity compared to the switchgrass rhizosphere, but this difference in soil dehydrogenase activity was not related to pyrene dissipation. In general, the use of plants was not effective in causing pyrene transformation; however, the presence of vegetation on polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon–contaminated soils could play a significant role in limiting the spread of contaminants (erosion, leaching) and enhancing ecosystem restoration. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
针对电厂用脱硫剂电石渣,分析了其基本组成及重金属浸出特性,为电厂脱硫设施的参数设计和环境影响评价提供依据和参考。研究结果表明,脱硫用电石渣主要成分为Ca(OH)2,含量在40%~50%之间;在8种重金属的含量中,只有Cd的含量超出土壤质量三级标准的要求,基本不会对土壤造成污染。浸出毒性试验表明,电石渣及其脱硫产物属于非危险废物,其各种重金属的浸出浓度主要受其本身重金属含量和最终pH的影响,这种影响在Pb、Cu和Cd上表现得较为突出,酸性环境下更有利于他们的浸出;碱性环境下有利于Pb和Ni的浸出。  相似文献   

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