Accumulation and partitioning of heavy metals in mangroves: A synthesis of field-based studies

MacFarlane, GR; Koller, CE; Blomberg, SP

HERO ID

496933

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2007

Language

English

PMID

17560628

HERO ID 496933
In Press No
Year 2007
Title Accumulation and partitioning of heavy metals in mangroves: A synthesis of field-based studies
Authors MacFarlane, GR; Koller, CE; Blomberg, SP
Journal Chemosphere
Volume 69
Issue 9
Page Numbers 1454-1464
Abstract We report the findings of a comparative analysis examining patterns of accumulation and partitioning of the heavy metals copper (Cu), lead (Pb) and zinc (Zn) in mangroves from available field-based studies to date, employing both species level analyses and a phylogenetic approach. Despite mangroves being a taxonomically diverse group, metal accumulation and partitioning for all metals examined were broadly similar across genera and families. Patterns of metal accumulation were also similar regardless of whether species were classified as salt secreting or non-secreting. Metals were accumulated in roots to concentrations similar to those of adjacent sediments with root bio-concentration factors (BCF; ratio of root metal to sediment metal concentration) of <= 1. Root BCFs were constant across the exposure range for all metals. Metal concentrations in leaves were half that of roots or lower. Essential metals (Cu and Zn; translocation factors (TF; ratio of leaf metal to root metal concentration) of 0.52 and 0.53, and leaf BCFs of 0.47 and 0.51, respectively) showed greater mobility than non-essential metals (Pb; TF of 0.31 and leaf BCF of 0.11). Leaf BCFs for the essential metals Cu and Zn decreased as environmental concentrations increased. The non-essential metal Pb was excluded from leaf tissue regardless of environmental concentrations. Thus mangroves as a group tend to operate as excluder species for non-essential metals and regulators of essential metals. For phytoremediation initiatives, mangrove ecosystems are perhaps best employed as phytostabilisers, potentially aiding in the retention of toxic metals and thereby reducing transport to adjacent estuarine and marine systems. (C) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Doi 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2007.04.059
Pmid 17560628
Url http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0045653507005863
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Bioaccumulation; Mangrove; Heavy metals; Copper; Lead; Zinc
Is Qa No
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