Long-term impact of primary domestic sewage on metal/loid accumulation in drainage ditch sediments, plants and water: Implications for phytoremediation and restoration

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

We evaluate the long-term performance of a vegetated drainage ditch (VDD) treating domestic sewage with respect to heavy metal/metalloid (HM/M) accumulation in sediments, plants and water. VDD sediment contained significantly higher macro and trace elements compared to an agricultural ditch (AD) sediment. However, concentrations of HM/Ms in VDD sediment were below the ranges considered toxic to plants.Most HM/Ms were efficiently removed in the VDD, whereby removal efficiencies varied between 11% for Al and 89% for K. Accumulation of HM/Ms varied among species and plant parts, although sequestration by plants represents only a small proportion (b 1%) of the inflow load. Accumulation of Al, As, Cd, Pb, Cr, Fe and Ni in VDD plants were mostly distributed in the roots, indicating an exclusive strategy for metal tolerance. The opposite was found for Zn, Cu, K, Ca, P, K,Na, N and Mg,which were accumulated either in the stems or leaves. Overall, concentrations of metals in sediment showed significant positive correlations with those in ditch plants. None of the studied species were identified as metal hyper-accumulators (i.e. N 10,000 mg kg−1 of Zn or Mn). Nevertheless, the high translocation factor (TF) values for Mn, Ni, Cu, Zn, Na, Mg, P, K and Ca in the ditch plants make them

Description

Citation

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By