Conflicting processes in the wetland plant rhizosphere: Metal retention or mobilization? |
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Authors: | Jacob Donna L Otte Marinus L |
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Institution: | (1) Wetland Ecology Research Group, Department of Botany, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Republic of Ireland |
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Abstract: | Increasingly wetlands are used for treatment of metal-contaminated water or as a cover over metal-enriched mine tailings. Natural wetlands may also be contaminated with metals from anthropogenic sources. While wetland conditions tend to be favorable for immobilization of metals, wetland plants could influence metal mobility through redox and pH processes in the rhizosphere. Our current knowledge of these processes is reviewed, focusing on the question of whether the advantages of growing wetland plants in metal-contaminated sediments outweigh the disadvantages. Wetland plants alter the redox conditions, pH and organic matter content of sediments and so affect the chemical speciation and mobility of metals. Metals may be mobilized or immobilized, depending on the actual combination of factors, and it is extremely difficult to predict which effects plants will actually have on metal mobility under a given set of conditions. However, while the effects of plants can extend several tens of centimeters into the sediments, there are no reports suggesting large-scale mobilization of metals by wetland plants. |
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Keywords: | bioavailability metals organic matter pH redox rhizosphere wetland |
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