Abstract

Cadmium (Cd) and other heavy metals usually coexist in soils. Effects of coexisting heavy metals on the accumulation and transfer of Cd in field soils by wheat remain poorly understood. Here we revealed changeable effects of coexisting Pb, Zn and Cu on the Cd transfer from soils to wheat grains. Soil burdens of Cd were found to exhibit positive correlations (r = 0.459–0.946) with those of coexisting Pb, Zn and Cu (particularly Pb). Effects of three coexisting metals on to the uptake of Cd by wheat varied in the directions and/or extents with types of metals and transfer processes of Cd. Coexisting Zn inhibited the uptake of Cd by wheat grains to higher extent than Pb and Cu. Soil Zn, along with soil Cd, soil pH and soil Ca, was used to construct the predictive model of grain Cd (R2 = 0.868). External verifications of the model on 572 datasets of large representation performed well. The predictive accuracy was about 54%, 73% and 89% for a factor of 1, 2 and 5 above and below the ideal fit, respectively. This finding has practical interest in risk assessments and remediation measures of Cd-contaminated soil sites in regional scales.

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