In-situ selection of suitable plants for the phytoremediation of multi-metals-contaminated sites in central Taiwan
Journal
International Journal of Phytoremediation
Journal Volume
11
Journal Volume
11
Journal Issue
3
Journal Issue
3
Pages
235-250
Start Page
235
End Page
250
ISSN
15497879
Date Issued
2009-03
Author(s)
Lai, Hung-Yu
Abstract
Soils contaminated with metals are a serious problem in central Taiwan; 70% of the metals-contaminated soils in Taiwan are distributed there. We used soil turnover and dilution methods to reduce the total concentration of metals in soil, but this technique may be not suitable for other sites because of their shallow soil depths, which were less than 60 cm. Central Taiwan has the largest flower market in Taiwan and we propose that using local flower species to clean up the metals-contaminated soils is a feasible solution. A 1.3-ha area contaminated by multiple metals (As, Cr, Ni, Cu, and Zn) located in central Taiwan was selected for this large-area phytoremediation experiment. According to the Taiwan Environmental Protection Administration project contract, in-situ selection experiments were conducted to select 12 potential species from 33 tested species for further large area experiment. After in-situ planting of 33 species of plants in the contaminated soil for 33 d, bougainvillea and cockscomb showed yellow-colored leaves and withered as the result of the toxicity of metals. Herbaceous plants can accumulate higher concentration of metals and have higher bioconcentration factor in relative to woody plants. Three weighting models of growth condition and the metal-accumulated concentration of plants growing in the site were evaluated and compared. Six woody plants and six herbaceous plants were selected as high potential metal accumulators for a further large-area experiment.
Subjects
In-situ selection experiment
Multi-metalscontaminated site
Phytoremediation
SDGs
Type
journal article
