Abstract

The Salix genus includes shrub species that are widely used in phytoremediation and various other phytotechnologies due to their advantageous characteristics, such as a high evapotranspiration (ET) rate, in particular when cultivated in short rotation intensive culture (SRIC). Observations made in past field studies suggest that ET and its impact on soil hydrology can also lead to increases in soil pollutant concentrations near shrubs. To investigate this, sections of a mature willow plantation (seven years old) were cut to eliminate transpiration (Cut treatment). Soil concentrations of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), aliphatic compounds C10–C50, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and five trace elements (Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni and Zn) were compared between the Cut and the uncut plots (Salix miyabeana ‘SX61’). Over 24 months, the results clearly show that removal of the willow shrubs limited the contaminants’ increase in the soil surface, as observed for C10–C50 and of 10 PAHs under the Salix treatment. This finding strongly reinforces a hypothesis that SRIC of willows may facilitate the migration of contaminants towards their roots, thus increasing their concentration in the surrounding soil. Such a “pumping effect” in a high-density willow crop is a prominent characteristic specific to field studies that can lead to counterintuitive results. Although apparent increases of contaminant concentrations contradict the purification benefits usually pursued in phytoremediation, the possibility of active phytoextraction and rhizodegradation is not excluded. Moreover, increases of pollutant concentrations under shrubs following migration suggest that decreases would consequently occur at the source points. Some reflections on interpreting field work results are provided.

Highlights

  • The results presented here demonstrate how counterintuitive results gathering can be in a field trial

  • Field studies are essential for the development of phytoremediation, among other reasons, because not every aspect of an open field system can be tested under controlled conditions

  • The pumping effect that a high-density willow crop under short rotation intensive culture (SRIC) management has on soil hydrology is a major field characteristic that cannot be taken into account in typical greenhouse experiments

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Summary

Introduction

Willows show strong tolerance to several contaminants, such as nitrogen rich wastewater [3], trace elements (TEs) [4], various petroleum hydrocarbons compounds [5,6], as well as pesticides [7], making them effective riparian buffer strips in agricultural systems [8]. Their utilization has been extended to treatment wetlands [9] as well as vegetation filters designed to treat landfill leachate [10]. Successful soil decontamination by phytoremediation is often challenging to demonstrate clearly, especially in field studies [15], characterized by many sources of variation that can influence the concentration and distribution of contaminants in soil [16]

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