Abstract

Graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (standard addition method) was used to determine the total arsenic in wild-growing mushrooms after digestion with nitric acid, then with perchloric acid and in associated soils after digestion with mixtures of nitric and hydrofluoric acids in a microwave system. Among 83 species of mushrooms the highest concentrations of arsenic on a dry mass basis were found in Laccaria amethystea (26–125 mg kg−1), Laccaria laccata (11–33 mg kg−1), Thelephora terrestris (38 mg kg−1), Boletus cavipes (11.6 mg kg−1) and Ramaria botrytis (10 mg kg−1). Mushroom caps of L. laccata, L. amethystea, and B. cavipes had approximately double the arsenic concentrations found in stems. The arsenic concentrations in caps of L. amethystea and L. laccata were directly proportional to the concentrations in the soils. The concentrations of arsenic in the soils were in the range 6.5–65 mg kg−1. Among the 19 mushroom caps with arsenic concentrations above the method detection limit of 0.2 mg As/kg dry mass, only L. amethystea and L. laccata had arsenic concentration ratios ‘cap/soil’ higher than 1 (between 1.1 and 1.9). Thelephora terrestris had a ratio of 2.37.

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