Abstract

The removal efficiency of water hyacinth for Zn, Cu, Pb and Cd after their entry into an undisturbed fresh water body was studied using minicosms placed within a reservoir. Variable parameters were water pH (6 or 8), single or multi-metal additions, and the plant biomass. The initial concentrations of Zn, Cu, Pb and Cd in water (500, 250, 250 and 50 μg/L, respectively) quickly decreased in the order Pb ≈ Cu ≫ Cd ≈ Zn in the first days. Metal removal was more efficient at pH 8 than at pH 6, and it was only slightly higher for single metals compared to multi-metal additions. After 8 days the remaining amounts of metals relative to their initial concentrations for multi-metal pollution treatments were 8% and 24% (Cu), 11% and 26% (Pb), 24% and 50% (Cd), and 18% and 57% (Zn) at pH 8 and pH 6, respectively. Increasing plant biomass promoted faster metal removal. The bioconcentration factor (the ratio of the metal concentration in whole plants to the initial metal concentration in water) exceeds 2000 for all metals (with the exception of Zn and Cd at pH 6). It was concluded that the water hyacinth can be successfully used for fast removal of metals in the initial stage of water body remediation.

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