Abstract

Alkalisation of soil by dust pollution from a cement plant was assumed to be the principal cause of changes in heavy metal uptake and allocation between hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × Populus tremuloides Michx.) compartments. Emission of over 40 years of alkaline dust (pH 12.3–12.6) into the atmosphere had resulted in an increase of pH and an elevated concentration of total heavy metals in the upper layer of the soil (0–30 cm), which is considerable even 14 years after dust pollution has stopped. The accumulation and allocation of heavy metals in stem, shoot and leaves varied between themselves and between the trees from polluted and unpolluted plantations depending more on the mobility of elements and pH than element concentrations in the alkaline soil. High levels of heavy metals in the soil do not mean similar concentrations and ratios in plants growing in contaminated soil.

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