Abstract

The concentrations of sulphur, zinc, copper, lead and cadmium in spring wheat grain and straw, Italian rye grass, timothy and lettuce were studied in a three-year field experiment conducted in southern Finland near a copper-nickel smelter and at nonpolluted control sites. A pot experiment with copper- and nickel-contaminated soils and with a nonpolluted soil as the control was conducted to determine the copper and nickel concentrations in soils phytotoxic for plants. Forty, 200 or 1000 mg of copper or nickel as cloride was added to 2 litres of soil. The nickel and copper concentrations in the shoots of oats were measured. The zinc, copper, lead, cadmium and nickel concentrations varied between different plant species and also between experimental years. Near the smelter, the uptake of nickel by different plant species was very effective, as was copper uptake by lettuce, timothy and Italian rye grass. The same applied to the zinc and cadmium uptake of plants grown on plots. Nickel, cadmium and copper were easily accumulated by plants from air deposition. In the pot experiment, high nickel concentrations in soil were more phytotoxic for oats than were high copper concentrations. In acidic soil, nickel and copper concentrations lower than 20 and 100 mg/kg of soil, respectively, decreased the dry matter yield of oats shoots. Liming clearly decreased copper and nickel phytotoxity. In the most highly contaminated soil, the addition of Cu 20 mg/kg of soil decreased the yield of oats shoots.

Highlights

  • The zinc, copper, lead, cadmium and nickel concentrations varied between different plant species and between experimental years

  • The purpose of this study was to determine the accumulation by plants ofheavy metals from airborne deposition and polluted soils

  • The other five experimental sites were near the Outokumpu works (6l°l9’N, 22°08’E) at Harjavalta (TAM, POH, PAP and TUP) and at Kokemäki (SAT) 90-100 km northwest of Jokioinen: TAM 800 m from the smelter to 91° POH 1300 m to 312° PAP 2700 m to 132° TUP 4400 m to 117° SAT 8500 m to 126°

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Summary

Introduction

The zinc, copper, lead, cadmium and nickel concentrations varied between different plant species and between experimental years. Cadmium and copper were accumulated by plants from air deposition. Nickel and copper concentrations lower than 20 and 100 mg/kg of soil, respectively, decreased the dry matter yield of oats shoots. In Finland, there are only a few places where heavy metal emissions are high enough to cause problems for agricultural plant production. One of these is the Outokumpu works at Harjavalta, Yläranta, T. Uptake ofheavy metals by plants from airborne deposition and polluted soils southwestern Finland.

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