Abstract

ABSTRACT Metallophytes have the ability to grow in metal-rich soils without showing signs of toxicity. It is believed that chelating of metals to organic ligands is a mechanism that metal-tolerant plants use for detoxification. To obtain information about metal species, water extracts of roots, stems and leaves from two metallophytes ( Blepharis aspera , and Helicrysum candolleanum ) were analysed using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) in combination with cation exchange solid-phase extraction (off-line) and on-line with size exclusion chromatography (SEC). The extracts were analysed for 10 metals that were present at higher than normal concentrations and for 8 elements that have physiological functions in plants. The elements studied were Al, Ba, Ca, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, Ni, P, S, Si, Ti, V and Zn. The total concentration and the percentage of water-extractable metal were determined in all plant parts. For both plants, K had the highest extraction efficiency (>70%), followed by Mg, Mn, Ni, P and Zn. The main elements Ca, K and Mg were found to be present only in cationic form in the extracts of both plants, whereas Al, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe and Ni were present partly in non-cationic form, indicating complex formation. Size exclusion chromatography showed that all the plant parts had a similar size distribution of the dissolved organic matter, exhibiting mainly one broad peak. All the metals co-eluted with the first part of this peak, suggesting that the metals were associated with relatively large organic molecules, and more so for H. candolleanum than for B. aspera , and more pronounced for the stems than for the roots and leaves. Such data indicate that the two plants may have different mechanisms of dealing with high metal concentrations.

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